Hearts Minds Voices

About The Book

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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