Home / Social Sciences / Politics / Russia and the Media: The Makings of a New Cold War

Russia and the Media: The Makings of a New Cold War

AUTHOR
Price
€25.00
€27.90 -10%
Upon request
Dispatched within 15 - 25 days.

Add to wishlist

President Vladimir Putin is a figure of both fear and fascination in the Western imagination. In the minds of media pundits and commentators, he personifies Russia itself - a country riven with contradictions, enthralling and yet always a threat to world peace.

But recent propaganda images that define public debate around growing tensions with Russia are not new or arbitrary. Russia and the Media asks, what is the role of Western journalism in constructing a new kind of Cold War with Russia? Focusing on British and US media coverage of moments of crisis and of co-operation between the West and Russia, McLaughlin exposes how such a Cold War framework shapes public perceptions of a major, hostile power reasserting itself on the world stage.

Scrutinising events such as the Ukraine/Crimea crisis, the Skripal Poisoning and Russia's military intervention in Syria - as well as analysing media coverage of the 2018 Russian presidential election and build up to the 2018 World Cup - Russia and the Media makes a landmark intervention at the intersection of media studies and international relations.

Author: McLaughlin Greg
Publisher: PLUTO PRESS
Pages: 224
ISBN: 9780745337654
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2020

1. Preface: The Cold War and Me

2. The Cold War, the Media and the Enemy Image

3. Putin is Russia; Russia is Putin: Reporting the Presidential Elections, 2000-2018

4. Talking to Vladimir

5. Tackling the Opposition: Litvinenko, Nemtsov, Pussy Riot, & Skripal

6. Putin at War: Second Chechnyan War (1999-2009), Georgia (2008), Syria (2012), Crimea/Ukraine (2014).

7. The Media and the Makings of a New Cold War?

Greg McLaughlin is an Associate of the Centre for Media Research at Ulster University. He is the author of The War Correspondent (Pluto, 2nd edition; 2016), and co-author with Stephen Baker of The Propaganda of Peace: The Role of Media and Culture in the Northern Ireland Peace Process (2010) and The British Media and Bloody Sunday (2015).

You may also like

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter to be the first to receive our new releases and offers
Your account Your wishlist