The Arrogance of American Power: What U.S. Leaders are Doing Wrong and why It's Our Duty to Dissent

Front Cover
Rowman & Littlefield, 2007 - 249 pages
We hear 'anti-American' on a daily basis, it seems. When does it indicate a serious threat to security? When is it merely a label that the Bush administration slaps on anyone who dares to disagree with its foreign policy? Nancy Snow tackles not only the government's manipulation of the term, but also the broader use of U.S. propaganda for public relations. She further connects these to the tendency of U.S. administrations and media_past and present_to focus on projecting a better U.S. image rather than addressing the issues behind why the country's image is so poor, both at home and abroad. Snow is an American propaganda expert and a former U.S. Information Agency and State Department official. If America truly cares what others think, she argues, it needs to get over itself as the 'number-one country.' The government needs to spend less time diverting public attention and more time enlisting the public to help improve foreign relations. It needs to involve all citizens, not just government-approved lackeys, 'journalists' paid to talk nice, or the predictable influentials and elites typically involved in foreign affairs. And the public needs to exercise its right to dissent_a critical power at the heart of democracy_rather than letting the government or the media halt foreign policy debates with labels, propaganda, and arrogant rhetoric.

From inside the book

Contents

LIVING IN THE NUMBER ONE COUNTRY
5
TAKING INVENTORY OF WHERE LANGUAGE LEADS US
10
AMERICA IN ATTITUDES AND OPINIONS
13
ON DISSENT AND FREE SPEECH
16
PROMOTING AMERICAN CULTURAL VALUES TO THE WORLD
21
WASHINGTON AND THE WAR STRUGGLE BATTLE OVER ISMS
25
AMERICA AND FOREIGN ISMS
28
AMERICA AND THE UNITED NATIONS
32
WE BECOME PROPAGANDISTS AGAIN
112
INFORMATION WARS
118
ITS ALL ABOUT THE BENJAMINS
122
THE HARD SELL AND SOFT POWER
127
MEDIA IS A BATTLEFIELD
134
THE FOX PERSUASION
137
IMAGE WARS
153
CLOSING THE PERCEPTION GAP
156

PERCEPTION IS REALITY IN MARKETING THE NUMBER ONE
38
PROPAGANDA AND THE PERCEPTION GAP
46
DECONSTRUCTING A LABEL
51
AMERICA AND THE PATRIOTIC DUTY OF DISSENT
55
FEAR APPEALS AT HOME AND ABROAD
59
TELLING OUR STORY TO THE WORLD FROM A GRITS PERSPECTIVE
64
YOU CAN CALL ME AL JAZEERA
68
WE ARENT THE WORLD
71
HOLLYWOOD PROPAGANDA
73
AMERICAN PROPAGANDA AND THE PRESS
82
JOURNALISM PUBLIC RELATIONS AND GOVERNMENT PROPAGANDA
86
WHEN TRUTH IS A DANGEROUS THING
90
BEYOND POLITICAL BIAS
93
CREDIBILITY AND THE AMERICAN PRESS
95
KILL YOUR TV
101
MARRYING PRESS AND PROPAGANDA IN AMERICA
104
THAT WOULD BE NICE
108
WERE NOT FREE WHEN OTHERS DONT BUY IT
160
ENLARGING THE AMERICAN BRAND
165
THE MORE CREDIBLE MESSENGER DEBATE
168
A METHOD OR MADNESS?
170
THE PROPAGANDA CZAR FROM PARIS AND TEXAS A PREMONITION
172
KAREN HUGHES II AND WHAT THE WORLD REALLY THINKS OF AMERICA
174
PUBLIC DIPLOMACY AND AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL
182
AN OUTSIDETHEBELTWAY PERSPECTIVE ON PUBLIC DIPLOMACY
184
AMERICAN PUBLIC DIPLOMACY AND THE TWOWAY STREET
192
WHAT THE YOUNG PEOPLE KNOW AND CAN TEACH US
196
PUBLIC DIPLOMACY POWER ELITES AND THE PHANTOM PUBLIC
202
A CALL FOR GLOBAL EDUCATION IN PUBLIC DIPLOMACY
208
BUILDING A CULTURAL DIPLOMACY ENVIRONMENT MOVEMENT
212
BIBLIOGRAPHY
222
INDEX
233
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Nancy Snow, an expert on American persuasion and propaganda, has appeared on CNN, ABC News, Fox News Channel, National Public Radio, BBC, and CBC. Formerly with the United States Information Agency and the State Department, Snow is associate professor of communications at California State University, Fullerton, and adjunct professor in the Annenberg School for Communication, University of Southern California. She also serves as senior research fellow in the USC Center on Public Diplomacy. For more information about Dr. Snow, please visit her website at http://www.nancysnow.com.

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