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INTERVENING IN THE PUBLIC SPHERE: GERMAN GOVERNMENTS AND THE PRESS, 1815–1870

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 June 2001

ABIGAIL GREEN
Affiliation:
Brasenose College, Oxford

Abstract

This article argues that the growth of a free press in nineteenth-century Germany went hand in hand with the growth of an official, government-sponsored, press. The collapse of pre-publication censorship in 1848 prompted the development of increasingly sophisticated (and relatively successful) press control strategies by German governments, in the shape of official newspapers, semi-official newspapers, and indirect government press influence. Government press policy was essentially reactive. Changes in press policy were usually prompted by political events. Furthermore, government press coverage was forced to reflect shifts in public opinion in order to maximize readership of official propaganda. Government press policy focused not just on the dissemination of pro-government opinion, but also on the dissemination of pro-government information, probably the most effective form of government press influence. News management was subtle, and targeted small circulation local newspapers, rather than high profile opposition newspapers. Consequently, historians have tended to overlook the scale of government news management.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2001 Cambridge University Press

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