The Cold War superpowers endeavored mightily to win hearts and minds abroad through what came to be called public diplomacy. While many target audiences were on the conflict's original front-lines in Europe the vast majority resided in areas in the throes of decolonization and experienced the Cold War as public diplomacy- as a media war for their allegiance rather than as violence. In these areas superpower public diplomacy encountered volatile issues of race empire poverty and decolonization-which intersected with the dynamics of the Cold War and with anti-imperialist currents. The challenge to US public diplomacy was acute. Jim Crow and Washington's European-imperial alliances were inseparable from the image of the United States and put American outreach unavoidably on the defensive. <p/>Newly independent voices in the non-European world responded to this media war by launching public-diplomacy campaigns of their own. In addition to validating the strategic importance of public diplomacy they articulated a different vision of the postwar world. Rejecting the superpowers' Cold War they forged the Third World project around nonalignment post-imperial economic development and anti-colonial racial solidarity. In doing so Jason C. Parker argues the United States inadvertently helped to nurture the Third World as a transnational imagined community on the postwar global landscape. <p/>Tracing US public diplomacy during the early years of the Cold War <em>Hearts Minds Voices</em> narrates how US foreign policy engaged with and impacted the Global South and international history more broadly.<br>
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