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Book Cover
Book
Author Hodge, Errol, 1936-

Title Radio wars : truth, propaganda, and the struggle for Radio Australia / Errol Hodge
Published Oakleigh, Vic., Australia ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1995

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  384.5406594 Hod/Rwt  AVAILABLE
 W'PONDS  384.5406594 Hod/Rwt  AVAILABLE
Description xii, 324 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, portraits ; 23 cm
Contents Machine derived contents note: 1. Radio Australia at war, 1939-49 -- 2. A Cold War weapon, 1950-53 -- 3. Moses: 'a gutless wonder', 1953-64 -- 4. Hasluck's push for power, 1965-72 -- 5. News commentaries: a Cold War battleground, 1950-72 -- 6. Vietnam: 'one of the chief agencies for radio propaganda', 1956-73 -- 7. The coming of detente, 1970-91 -- 8. Indonesian honeymoon, 1945-74 -- 9. Collision with Indonesia, 1975-88 -- 10. Indonesian massacre, 1991-93 -- 11. Voice of Australia -- 12. A future for Radio Australia? -- 13. The new wave: international television, 1985-94
Summary Radio Australia - the multilingual overseas radio service of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation - is little known in Australia, but is heard by millions of listeners in the Asia-Pacific region and others throughout the world, including the USA and Britain. Radio Wars is the first book to tell the story of this important but unexplored aspect of Australia's international presence. Launched in 1939 as a propaganda tool, the service was for three decades caught uncomfortably between those who would use it as an instrument of foreign policy and those who would have it an icon of journalistic integrity. From World War II to the Vietnam War, Radio Australia's news coverage and commentary was coloured by politics and internal conflict. In a covert war, broadcasters, bureaucrats and politicians struggled for the editorial control of Radio Australia. But the author argues that by the time of the Dili massacre, propaganda had given way to forthright and factual reporting. Spiced with anecdotal detail, Radio Wars traces a struggle that ranges from personal pettiness to events with significant political ramifications. Dr Errol Hodge raises important questions about journalism, censorship and foreign policy - questions which gain new urgency in light of Radio Australia's role in disseminating information to developing countries
Analysis Australia
Radio Journalism History
History
Radio Australia
Notes CIP confirmed
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Audience Tertiary, Professional/Research
Subject Radio Australia -- History.
International broadcasting -- Australia -- History.
Radio broadcasting -- Australia -- History.
Radio -- Australia -- History.
LC no. 94035093
ISBN 0521473802
0521479274 (paperback)