1st Edition

Coercion or Persuasion? Propaganda in Britain After 1945

By William Crofts Copyright 1989
322 Pages
by Routledge

322 Pages
by Routledge

322 Pages
by Routledge

In 1945, the new Labour government in Britain had two choices in pursuit of their programme of social change. They could use government orders and coercion, an extension of wartime siege economy; or they could try to persuade the people that their way was best for Britain. Morale-boosting propaganda directed towards the British public had been tried in the two wars against Germany, but this was... Read more

1. Crises years  2. No paper. No ink. No minister  3. We work or want  4. Report to the Nation  5. Productivity pays  6. More work than workers  7. Women on the march  8. Lancashire’s thread  9. Raising the status  10. Owd snack  11. Let’s get weaving!  12. Join the land army  13. The miners: our boys in the front line  14. Anti-nationalization propaganda  15. The government under fire  16. Self-inflicted wound  17. Images for export

Biography

William Crofts worked in advertising for over twenty years and was for sixteen years Senior Lecturer in Marketing Communication and Public Relations at Bristol Polytechnic.

Review of the first publication:

‘…this is an important and valuable study.’

Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 16, No. 2