Propaganda The Original 1928 Text with a Contemporary Update 2.0 - Evolution of Influence
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Beschrijving
Bol
Propaganda did not disappear with the twentieth century. It evolved.In an age of algorithms, institutional messaging, curated visibility, and information overload, influence rarely announces itself openly. It operates quietly - through repetition, framing, incentives, social pressure, selective attention, and the systems that determine what people see, ignore, reward, or fear.Drawing from the foundational work of Edward Bernays while examining the architecture of modern media, politics, technology, education, and institutional power, Propaganda 2.0 explores how public opinion is shaped in contemporary society without requiring overt coercion or centralized control.This book argues that modern influence works most effectively when it feels natural, decentralized, and invisible. Individuals believe they are acting independently while operating inside systems designed to guide perception, behavior, and emotional response.Inside this book, readers will explore:How modern propaganda differs from traditional state messagingThe role of algorithms, media incentives, and platform architecture in shaping perceptionWhy emotional framing often overrides factual analysisHow institutions maintain stability through narrative alignmentThe psychology of conformity, outrage, and social reinforcementWhy influence no longer requires censorship to be effectiveHow information abundance can reduce independent judgment rather than strengthen itThe difference between persuasion, manipulation, narrative framing, and social conditioningRather than presenting conspiracy theories or partisan arguments, Propaganda 2.0 examines the structural systems that shape modern thought across politics, culture, media, and everyday life.The result is a direct and unsettling examination of how influence operates in the twenty-first century - not through force, but through normalization.
Propaganda did not disappear with the twentieth century. It evolved.In an age of algorithms, institutional messaging, curated visibility, and information overload, influence rarely announces itself openly. It operates quietly - through repetition, framing, incentives, social pressure, selective attention, and the systems that determine what people see, ignore, reward, or fear.Drawing from the foundational work of Edward Bernays while examining the architecture of modern media, politics, technology, education, and institutional power, Propaganda 2.0 explores how public opinion is shaped in contemporary society without requiring overt coercion or centralized control.This book argues that modern influence works most effectively when it feels natural, decentralized, and invisible. Individuals believe they are acting independently while operating inside systems designed to guide perception, behavior, and emotional response.Inside this book, readers will explore:How modern propaganda differs from traditional state messagingThe role of algorithms, media incentives, and platform architecture in shaping perceptionWhy emotional framing often overrides factual analysisHow institutions maintain stability through narrative alignmentThe psychology of conformity, outrage, and social reinforcementWhy influence no longer requires censorship to be effectiveHow information abundance can reduce independent judgment rather than strengthen itThe difference between persuasion, manipulation, narrative framing, and social conditioningRather than presenting conspiracy theories or partisan arguments, Propaganda 2.0 examines the structural systems that shape modern thought across politics, culture, media, and everyday life.The result is a direct and unsettling examination of how influence operates in the twenty-first century - not through force, but through normalization.
AmazonPagina's: 400, Paperback, FUHS Press
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