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Manufacturing Consent
Manufacturing Consent
Dec 27, 2024 9:52 AM

Author:Noam Chomsky,Edward S Herman

Manufacturing Consent

A detailed and compelling political study of how elite forces shape mass media.

Edward S Herman and Noam Chomsky investigate how an underlying elite consensus structures mainstream media. Here they skilfully dissect the way in which the marketplace and the economics of publishing significantly shape the news.

This book reveals how issues are framed and topics chosen, and the double standards underlying accounts of free elections, a free press, and governmental repression between Nicaragua and El Salvador; between the Russian invasion of Afghanistan and the American invasion of Vietnam; between the genocide in Cambodia under a pro-American government and genocide under Pol Pot.

What emerges from this ground-breaking work is an account of just how propagandistic our mass media can be, and how we can learn to read them and see their function in a radically new way.

Reviews

'This is the best biography yet of the media magnate Robert Maxwell - by turns engrossing, amusing and appalling... it slips down as richly, easily and pleasurably as a tablespoonful of Beluga caviar'

—— Robert Harris , Sunday Times

'Electrifying... the supreme chronicler of modern British scandals'

—— Mail on Sunday

'This is such a richly detailed, well-written, gripping biography I wished it could have been twice as long'

—— Lynn Barber , Daily Telegraph

'I have a shelf full of books about frauds, but this one is by far the most enjoyable. By turns self-righteous and revolting, Maxwell makes the perfect villain'

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday

'Any good biography of a mountebank depicts not only its subject but also the ambivalent society that accommodated the monster. John Preston's Fall does this with deft understatement ... Preston's A Very English Scandal used an almost novelistic eye to revive a well-worn scandal. Fall is equally satisfying'

—— Quentin Letts , The Times

'An absorbing profile of the war hero turned rogue ... Preston comes to his subject with the advantage both of hindsight and his great skill at exposing hypocrisy and subterfuge ... he has an eye for the telling detail and an ear for the revealing quote'

—— Observer, Book of the Week

'There have been many books written about Robert Maxwell, but surely none as pacy, entertaining and jaw-dropping as this one... yes, this is quite a book'

—— Daily Mail

'Preston has written a wonderfully ­entertaining book and interviewed almost everyone who crossed ­Maxwell's path in his heyday. He has an eye for comedy and drama and, where he explains his subject's shady and dauntingly complex business dealings, he does so clearly and succinctly'

—— New Statesman

'Irresistible page-turning pace ... what emerges from Fall is a vividly grotesque picture of the emperor showing off his nonexistent new clothes to an applauding crowd of courtiers - politicians, editors, bankers - who all too willingly suspended any disbelief they may have felt'

—— Francis Wheen , Spectator

'John Preston's book Fall, a recounting of the life of one of the most extraordinary figures in British corporate life, is timely ... almost 30 years since Maxwell died at sea in unexplained circumstances, it is possible to look back on his story and the fraud as a great, sweeping whole, a bridge from the second world war to the last years of the media barons before the internet began ... Preston tells the story well ... its strength is in telling the grand sweep of an extraordinary life'

—— Financial Times

'Vivid ... Preston (has a) gift for the kind of wry comedy that suits English decline'

—— Guardian, Book of the Day

'John Preston's research for this terrific biography is extensive; he interviewed three of Maxwell's children and his sister. But he also presents a large character at the heart of a gripping novel which happens to be true'

—— Evening Standard

'Thanks to Preston's fine writing, Fall fizzes along at pace and is engrossing as it charts Maxwell's astonishing life - and how he came to be so widely reviled'

—— i

'John Preston tells [the story of Maxwell] with great verve and the benefit of extensive interviews with, among others, Maxwell's one-time rival Rupert Murdoch... the portrait that emerges is more subtly drawn than previous ones'

—— Economist

'John Preston brings the old crook and liar magnificently to life in this sparkling biography... this beautifully written book provides many moments of high and low comedy... Preston's sharp eye for the ridiculous and the piquant conjures up a lost Fleet Street world'

—— Jewish Chronicle

'Preston is a natural storyteller'

—— The Times

Deeply researched, fluently written, and darkly comic, it reads like a thriller

—— Ben Macintyre on 'A Very English Scandal'

Brilliant, sad, startling

—— Jon Ronson on 'A Very English Scandal'

A terrific book and brilliantly researched

—— Claire Tomalin on 'A Very English Scandal'

Very funny and endlessly extraordinary

—— Guardian on 'A Very English Scandal'

Preston is a natural storyteller

—— The Times

Sen is one of the great minds of both the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. We owe him a huge debt

—— Nicholas Stern

A distinguished inheritor of the tradition of public philosophy and reasoning - Roy, Tagore, Gandhi, Nehru ... if ever there was a global intellectual, it is Sen

—— Sunil Khilnani , Financial Times
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