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Communications and Power
Propaganda and the Press in the Indian National Struggle, 1920–1947

Milton Israel's 1994 book describes the role of the press in the last stage of the nationalist struggle in India before the British departure.

Milton Israel (Author)

9780521420372, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 14 April 1994

354 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.4 cm, 0.69 kg

At the end of the First World War, Government of India officials and Indian nationalist politicians began to recognise the need for an organized communications network that could reach out to a large and diverse Indian population. The challenge for Government and nationalists alike was to create an effective propaganda machine that could both disseminate news and, at the same time, elicit the desired political response. Milton Israel's 1994 book describes the role of the press, news services and propaganda agencies in the last stage of the nationalist struggle in India before the departure of the British, emphasizing the media's participation in the development of a 'national' perspective. Within this context, the author examines the significance of the encounter between imperialism and nationalism and the influence one had upon the other in achieving often conflicting objectives.

Introduction: politics and the press in a colonial setting
1. The Government of India: images and messages in the defense of authority
2. The news services: 'impartial Reuters' or 'foreign pipes'
3. The Congress search for a common voice
4. The Bombay Chronicle: a case study
5. The struggle overseas
Conclusion.

Subject Areas: Propaganda [JPVN]

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