Public Relations History

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1be Age
A01=Scott M. Cutlip
Adjutant General's Office
Adjutant General’s Office
American National Red Cross
Atlantic Blockading Squadron
Author_Scott M. Cutlip
boone
Buffalo Bill
Category=GTC
Category=KJSP
Category=NHTB
colonial persuasion tactics
Colorado Gold Rushes
Common Carriers
daniel
Dexter Fellows
early American public opinion development
East Indies
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
gazetteer
head
hilton
Hilton Head Island
history of propaganda
independent
island
John Marsh
Kentucky Legislature
massachusetts
media influence studies
MIT President
National Committee
National Tuberculosis Association
nonprofit advocacy strategies
political communication
Post Office Department
Press Agentry
promotional
Promotional Tracts
Publicity Bureau
Publicity Work
Rail Road
Railroad
Rhode Island General Assembly
social consensus formation
tracts
Van Buren Administration
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805817805
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jun 1995
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This important volume documents events and routines defined as public relations practice, and serves as a companion work to the author's The Unseen Power: Public Relations which tells the history of public relations as revealed in the work and personalities of the pioneer agencies.

This history opens with the 17th Century efforts of land promoters and colonists to lure settlers from Europe -- mainly England -- to this primitive land along the Atlantic Coast. They used publicity, tracts, sermons, and letters to disseminate rosy, glowing accounts of life and opportunity in the new land. The volume closes with a description of the public relations efforts of colleges and other non-profit agencies in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, thus providing a bridge across the century line.

This study of the origins of public relations provides helpful insight into its functions, its strengths and weaknesses, and its profound though often unseen impact on our society. Public relations or its equivalents -- propaganda, publicity, public information -- began when mankind started to live together in tribal camps where one's survival depended upon others of the tribe. To function, civilization requires communication, conciliation, consensus, and cooperation -- the bedrock fundamentals of the public relations function.

This volume is filled with robust public struggles -- the struggles of which history is made and a nation built:
* the work of the Revolutionaries, led by the indomitable Sam Adams, to bring on the War of Independence that gave birth to a New Nation;
* the propaganda of Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay in the Federalist papers to win ratification of the U.S. Constitution -- prevailing against the propaganda of the AntiFederalists led by Richard Henry Lee;
* the battle between the forces of President Andrew Jackson, led by Amos Kendall, and those of Nicholas Biddle and his Bank of the United States which presaged corporate versus government campaigns common today:
* the classic presidential campaign of 1896 which pitted pro-Big Business candidate William McKinley against the Populist orator of the Platte, William Jennings Bryan.

This book details the antecedents of today's flourishing, influential vocation of public relations whose practitioners -- some 150,000 professionals -- make their case for their clients or their employers in the highly competitive public opinion marketplace.

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