The Propaganda of Peace

The Role of Media and Culture in the Northern Ireland Peace Process

By (author) Greg McLaughlin, Stephen Baker

Publication date:

15 August 2010

Publisher

Intellect Books

Dimensions:

229x178mm
7x9"

ISBN-13: 9781841502724

When political opponents Ian Paisley and Martin McGuiness were confirmed as First Minister and Deputy First Minister of a new Northern Ireland executive in May 2007, a chapter was closed on Northern Ireland’s troubled past. A dramatic realignment of politics had brought these irreconcilable enemies together – and the media played a significant role in persuading the public to accept this startling change. The Propaganda of Peace places their role in a wider cultural context and examines a broad range of factual and fictional representations, from journalism and public museum exhibitions to film, television drama and situation comedy. The authors propose a radically different theoretical and methodological approach to the media’s role in reporting and representing. They ask whether the ‘propaganda of peace’ actually promotes the abandonment of a politically engaged public sphere at the very moment when public debate about neo-liberalism, financial meltdown and social and economic inequality make it most necessary.

'well-documented, tightly reasoned and carefully crafted'