| #4990311 in Books | 2002-10-22 | 2002-11-05 | Original language:English | PDF # 1 | .24 x4.34 x6.90l, | File type: PDF | 124 pages||13 of 14 people found the following review helpful.| U.S. views other countries as clients and customers|By A Customer|This book is lively and informative. I would say "shocking," but nothing shocks me anymore. If the author is correct, the USIA is a sort of shadow embassy of the U.S., selling skewed, altered, and sometimes false views of this culture to other countries, the intent being, in the end, to drum up business for||Nancy Snow pulls the curtain on the U.S. Information Agency and shows it to be just another front for corporate America. --Jim Hightower, author of There's Nothing in the Middle of the Road but Yellow Stripes and Dead Armadillos --back cover blurb|
An eye-opening overview of American cultural policy fully updated through the end of the Bush presidency, Propaganda, Inc. reveals how the United States Information Agency became a bureaucracy deeply distrustful of dissent, and one-way in its promotion of American corporate interests overseas. Nancy Snow spent two years inside the Agency, and here provides an insider's account of its crooked relationship to corporate interests and war—a must-read for those conce...
You can specify the type of files you want, for your device.Propaganda, Inc.: Selling America's Culture to the World (Seven Stories' Open Media) | Nancy Snow. I really enjoyed this book and have already told so many people about it!