|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
Radio Hitler follows the life of Deutschlandsender, the Nazi
equivalent of BBC Radio 4, and its sister stations that transmitted
to Germany and the world at large. Using first-hand interviews,
archives, diaries, letters and memoirs, this book examines what
Nazi radio was and what it stood for. Detailed here is the vast
'fake news' effort, which bombarded audiences in the Middle East,
Africa, the United States and Great Britain. A light is also shone
on the home service stations that, with their monumental
announcements including Stalingrad, the assassination attempt on
Hitler and the invasion of France, provided the soundtrack to
everyday life in Nazi Germany. Details of entertainment shows and
programmes designed to lift morale on the Home Front are abundant
and offer a fresh insight into the psyche of the nation. The book
also looks at Nazi attempts to develop television throughout
Germany and in occupied France. A rich cast of characters is
featured throughout, including Ernst Himmler, brother of Heinrich,
who worked as technical chief at Deutschlandsender, and Lord
Haw-Haw, the infamous British mouthpiece of the Nazi propaganda
machine. Nathan Morley had unlimited access to former Reich radio
studios and transmitter sites in Hamburg, Berlin, and Vienna, as
well as to a vast archive of recordings and transcripts. The result
is a fascinating and revealing portrait of propaganda,
communication and media in Nazi Germany.
Radio Hitler follows the life of Deutschlandsender, the Nazi
equivalent of BBC Radio 4, and its sister stations that transmitted
to Germany and the world at large. Using first-hand interviews,
archives, diaries, letters and memoirs, this book examines what
Nazi radio was and what it stood for. Detailed here is the vast
'fake news' effort, which bombarded audiences in the Middle East,
Africa, the United States and Great Britain. A light is also shone
on the home service stations that, with their monumental
announcements including Stalingrad, the assassination attempt on
Hitler and the invasion of France, provided the soundtrack to
everyday life in Nazi Germany. Details of entertainment shows and
programmes designed to lift morale on the Home Front are abundant
and offer a fresh insight into the psyche of the nation. The book
also looks at Nazi attempts to develop television throughout
Germany and in occupied France. A rich cast of characters is
featured throughout, including Ernst Himmler, brother of Heinrich,
who worked as technical chief at Deutschlandsender, and Lord
Haw-Haw, the infamous British mouthpiece of the Nazi propaganda
machine. Nathan Morley had unlimited access to former Reich radio
studios and transmitter sites in Hamburg, Berlin, and Vienna, as
well as to a vast archive of recordings and transcripts. The result
is a fascinating and revealing portrait of propaganda,
communication and media in Nazi Germany.
|
You may like...
Top Five
Chris Rock, Rosario Dawson, …
Blu-ray disc
R38
Discovery Miles 380
|