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Who Paid The Piper? - The CIA And The Cultural Cold War (Paperback, New edition)
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Who Paid The Piper? - The CIA And The Cultural Cold War (Paperback, New edition)
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List price R397
Loot Price R358
Discovery Miles 3 580
You Save R39 (10%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The end of World War II left the allied forces occupying Germany
with a dilemma: everyone knew that, though undeclared, the old
enmity with Soviet Russia had been resumed, and the Russians were
already winning hearts and minds by pouring a great deal of money
into a wide range of cultural events and conferences. How was the
West to respond? A group of die-hard anticommunists responded by
disrupting the communist-inspired conferences while staging their
own rival events. These were often crude, notable for being boring,
overly stage-managed, and for generating little beyond hot air; but
both sides were new at this form of cultural propaganda. They soon
got a great deal more subtle, as those who organized these pro-West
cultural programmes (they ranged from full-blown arts festivals to
conferences to providing financial and even editorial support for a
plethora of small magazines such as Encounter) were absorbed into
the new-born CIA. Eventually the CIA found itself committing a vast
proportion of its financial resources and its manpower, often by
way of a bewildering array of supposedly independent charitable
foundations, to this curious aspect of the Cold War. Saunders
chronicles this entire story with both verve and an astonishing
attention to detail, in particular her portraits of the central
players in events - Michael Josselson, Nicolas Nabokov, Melvin
Lasky - are both perceptive and convincing. Without a detailed
knowledge of the secret history of the last half century, it is
hard to say exactly how much is genuinely revelatory in her story -
certainly the role of the CIA in bankrolling much of European
cultural life has been widely suspected if not an open secret for
almost the entire period covered by this book - but it still
amounts to an interesting and unexpected cultural history of our
age. (Kirkus UK)
During the Cold War, writers and artists were faced with a huge
challenge. In the Soviet world, they were expected to turn out
works that glorified militancy, struggle and relentless optimism.
In the West, freedom of expression was vaunted as liberal
democracy's most cherished possession. But such freedom could carry
a cost. This book documents the extraordinary energy of a secret
campaign in which some of the most vocal exponents of intellectual
freedom in the West became instruments - whether they knew it or
not, whether they liked it or not - of America's secret service.
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