Totalitarian Communication :Hierarchies, Codes and Messages ( Kultur- und Medientheorie )

Publication subTitle :Hierarchies, Codes and Messages

Publication series :Kultur- und Medientheorie

Author: Postoutenko Kirill  

Publisher: transcript-Verlag‎

Publication year: 2014

E-ISBN: 9783839413937

Subject: C91 Sociology;K1 World History

Keyword: 信息与知识传播,世界史

Language: ENG

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Description

Totalitarianism has been an object of extensive communicative research since its heyday: already in the late 1930s, such major cultural figures as George Orwell or Hannah Arendt were busy describing the visual and verbal languages of Stalinism and Nazism. After the war, many fashionable trends in social sciences and humanities (ranging from Begriffsgeschichte and Ego-Documentology to Critical Linguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis) were called upon to continue this media-centered trend in the face of increasing political determination of the burgeoing field.
Nevertheless, the integration of historical, sociological and linguistic knowledge about totalitarian society on a firm factual ground remains the thing of the future.
This book is the first step in this direction. By using history and theory of communication as an integrative methodological device, it reaches out to those properties of totalitarian society which appear to be beyond the grasp of specific disciplines. Furthermore, this functional approach allows to extend the analysis of communicative practices commonly associated with fascist Italy, Nazi Germany and Soviet Union, to other locations (France, United States of America and Great Britain in the 1930s) or historical contexts (post-Soviet developments in Russia or Kyrgyzstan). This, in turn, leads to the revaluation of the very term »totalitarian«: no longer an ideological label or a stock attribute of historical narration, it gets a life of i

Chapter

HIERACHIES

Stalinist Rule and its Communication Practices. An Overview

Public Communication in Totalitarian, Authoritarian and Statist Regimes A Comparative Glance

Performance and Management of Political Leadership in Totalitarian and Democratic Societies. The Soviet Union, Germany and the United States in 1936

CODES

The Duce in the Street. Illumination in Fascism

Audio Media in the Service of the Totalitarian State?

The Birth of Socialist Realism out of the Spirit of Radiophonia. Maxim Gorky’s Project “Literaturnaja ucheba”

MESSAGES

Totalitarian Propaganda as Discourse. A Comparative Look at Austria and France in the Fascist Era

Violence, Communication and Imagination. Pre-Modern, Totalitarian and Liberal-Democratic Torture

The Lure of Fascism?. Extremist Ideology in the Newspaper Reality Before WWII

POST-TOTALITARIAN COMMUNICATION?

Uneasy Communication in the Authoritarian State. The Case of Hizb ut-Tahrir in Kyrgyzstan

Afterthoughts on “Totalitarian” Communication

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