Taking German-British „newspaper wars“ as an example, this study looks at the interaction between the emerging mass press and foreign policy, traditionally conducted as secret diplomacy, in the 25 years before the First World War. „Press feuds“ are construed as focal points that highlighted contemporary discourses and the actions of various individuals and social groups. They represented phases in which media and political communication intensified, and in which enemy images were created or confirmed, self-perceptions modified or consolidated. At the same time they presented an opportunity to examine and re-adjust the relationship between diplomacy and the public sphere. The example of Anglo-German relations is particularly suitable for an ...
The purpose of this thesis is to provide a case-study in the making of British foreign policy by rel...
Because the field of Anglo-German relations remains a function of domestic history rather than a sub...
This article argues that the growth of a free press in nineteenth-century Germany went hand in hand ...
<p>This dissertation analyzes the history of the press bureau of the German Foreign Office before th...
Scholarship on media and politics presumes a ‘mediatization’ of politics over time, which overlooks ...
This is an exploration of the effects of the press on British and German foreign policy between 1876...
Journalists and the media have not only played a role as political actors in Anglo-German relations,...
From 1871 to 1914, Germany experienced its first taste of world power and the failure of controlling...
The ‘old’ diplomacy of the nineteenth century relied on face-to-face-interaction as a universally ac...
This article examines the role of the news industry in the relationship between Britain and France b...
This thesis examines the historical problem of determining the relationship between a government's p...
Statements such as 'Britain and France wanted peace in 1938' are the stock-in-trade of the textbooks...
This paper argues that the communication of European integration by the media did not begin with the...
© 2016 Sofie OnoratoThis thesis explores how changing circumstances throughout the Franco-Prussian W...
For nearly 80 years, historians have debated whether the western powers or the USSR should be blamed...
The purpose of this thesis is to provide a case-study in the making of British foreign policy by rel...
Because the field of Anglo-German relations remains a function of domestic history rather than a sub...
This article argues that the growth of a free press in nineteenth-century Germany went hand in hand ...
<p>This dissertation analyzes the history of the press bureau of the German Foreign Office before th...
Scholarship on media and politics presumes a ‘mediatization’ of politics over time, which overlooks ...
This is an exploration of the effects of the press on British and German foreign policy between 1876...
Journalists and the media have not only played a role as political actors in Anglo-German relations,...
From 1871 to 1914, Germany experienced its first taste of world power and the failure of controlling...
The ‘old’ diplomacy of the nineteenth century relied on face-to-face-interaction as a universally ac...
This article examines the role of the news industry in the relationship between Britain and France b...
This thesis examines the historical problem of determining the relationship between a government's p...
Statements such as 'Britain and France wanted peace in 1938' are the stock-in-trade of the textbooks...
This paper argues that the communication of European integration by the media did not begin with the...
© 2016 Sofie OnoratoThis thesis explores how changing circumstances throughout the Franco-Prussian W...
For nearly 80 years, historians have debated whether the western powers or the USSR should be blamed...
The purpose of this thesis is to provide a case-study in the making of British foreign policy by rel...
Because the field of Anglo-German relations remains a function of domestic history rather than a sub...
This article argues that the growth of a free press in nineteenth-century Germany went hand in hand ...