The Persian Gulf TV War

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The Persian Gulf TV War is a critical media studies book by Douglas Kellner that analyzes how television coverage shaped public perception and politics during the 1990–1991 Gulf War.

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The Persian Gulf TV War canonical 1

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Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf book
media studies book
non-fiction book
about CNN and 24-hour news
Pentagon media strategy
censorship and news filtering
construction of consent
critical media literacy
information control
media democracy
media spectacle
patriotic framing in U.S. media
propaganda
public relations management of war
representation of violence
television coverage of the 1990–1991 Gulf War
argues that television coverage helped manufacture consent for the war
that the Gulf War was presented as a media spectacle
author Douglas Kellner
countryOfFocus United States of America
surface form: United States
examines how television shaped public perception of the Gulf War
the construction of enemy images
the marginalization of dissenting voices
the relationship between media and state power
the role of images in modern warfare
field communication studies
media studies
political science
focusesOn audience reception
news framing
role of experts and commentators
television networks
visual imagery of war
genre critical media studies
cultural studies
political communication
historicalEventAnalyzed Gulf War
surface form: 1990–1991 Gulf War
language English
mainSubject Gulf War
U.S. politics
media coverage of war
public opinion
television news
theoreticalApproach Frankfurt School–influenced media critique
critical theory
cultural studies perspective
timePeriodCovered 1990–1991
usedIn courses on critical media literacy
university courses on media and war

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Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Douglas Kellner notableWork The Persian Gulf TV War