Description
Demonstrates the crucial significance of British and Greek Cypriot propaganda during the Greek Cypriot anti-colonial revolt (1955-1959), using new English and Greek language source material to reveal how and why the British Empire lost the battle for hearts and minds in Cyprus.
About the Author
Maria Hadjiathanasiou is a Research Fellow at the Department of Politics and Governance, University of Nicosia, Cyprus. She has received funding from the European Commission under the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme, to conduct research on the topic of British, Greek and Turkish cultural diplomacy in Cyprus, 1945-1974 (2019-2021). She received her PhD in Modern History in 2017 from the University of Bristol. Her research interests focus on decolonisation and colonial insurgencies, cultural history and propaganda.
Reviews
Dr Hadjiathanasiou's book is required reading for all those interested in histories of propaganda, empire and decolonisation. Using a wealth of new archival sources relating to the Cyprus Emergency, including a rich body of evidence in Greek as well as English, she draws out the crucial importance of propaganda and media manipulation in mobilising nationalist resistance and waging wars of counterinsurgency at the end of empire. This ground-breaking and painstaking study allows us see a key late-colonial struggle for power, hearts and minds, in which the combatants targeted audiences in Britain, Cyprus, and around the world, from a new perspective. * Professor Simon J. Potter, University of Bristol, UK *
Can persuasion through directed information take the edges off armed conflict and bring victory at a lower cost? In late-colonial Cyprus the British discovered their presumed superiority at propaganda could not match a sophisticated anti-colonial movement with ethnic unity as their message. Cyprus is a vital case for understanding propaganda's place in decolonisation conflicts. In Maria Hadjiathanasiou's able hands, the topic has finally found the analyst its significance deserves. * Dr. Huw Bennett, Cardiff University, UK *
Maria Hadjiathanasiou's lucid account of the British propaganda campaign in colonial Cyprus tells us how pervasive that information war was, and reveals the many tricks of the trade that protected British interests and sought to diminish EOKA's impact. This study adds an important new dimension to our understanding of the Cyprus conflict. * Professor David M. Anderson, University of Warwick, UK *
[T]he book is worth reading because, as it is based on a bulk of newly released primary material, it shifts the focus of the current historiography away from an overwhelming emphasis on the use of 'wholesale coercion', and clearly proves that propaganda was, along with coercion, a joint driver in the conflict for Cyprus. * The Cyprus Review *
Book Information
ISBN 9780755637546
Author Maria Hadjiathanasiou
Format Paperback
Page Count 264
Imprint Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Weight(grams) 367g