Books > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945
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Don't Mention the War - The Australian Defence Force, the Media and the Afghan Conflict (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R437
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Don't Mention the War - The Australian Defence Force, the Media and the Afghan Conflict (Paperback, New)
Series: Investigating Power
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List price R586
Loot Price R437
Discovery Miles 4 370
You Save R149 (25%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Don't Mention the War examines Australian media coverage of the war
in Afghanistan. The book demonstrates how the military's public
affairs personnel have taken over many of the roles traditionally
performed by reporters and shows the restrictive affect of this on
media coverage. This tight media management is contrasted with the
more open approach of Dutch and Canadian militaries in Afghanistan,
a fact that is explained through reference to the different
positions of the military within these different nations. As
opposed to the Dutch and the Canadians, who had reputations to
rebuild, the almost uniquely exalted position of the military in
Australia has enabled and driven a media strategy tailored to
defend the Australian military's high social standing. In
Australian media coverage, the book goes on to argue, the war in
Afghanistan has then functioned as another platform for the
celebration of national military virtues. What has been offered is
less a representation of action than an affirmation of identity;
less a chronicle of unfolding events than a testament to immutable
character. *** "Foster argues convincingly that the ADF's
determination to keep an iron grip on information, based on an
entrenched cultural distain for journalists, a resistance to
scrutiny, and an obsession with protecting its reputation, meant
that what it was actually doing in Afghanistan remained a mystery.
While he attributes authorship of this mystery to the ADF
hierarchy, supported at times by politicians, journalists don't
escape his censure. His book is an indictment of the lack of
commitment by Australian editors to covering the Afghan war." - Tom
Hyland, Inside Story, January 2014
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