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The Propaganda Model Today: Filtering Perception and Awareness

Joan Pedro-Carañana, Daniel Broudy and Jeffery Klaehn
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While the individual elements of the propaganda system (or filters) identified by the Propaganda Model (PM) – ownership, advertising, sources, flak and anti-communism – have previously been the focus of much scholarly attention, their systematisation in a model, empirical corroboration and historicisation have made the PM a useful tool for media analysis across cultural and geographical boundaries.

Despite the wealth of scholarly research Herman and Chomsky’s work has set into motion over the past decades, the PM has been subjected to marginalisation, poorly informed critiques and misrepresentations. Interestingly, while the PM enables researchers to form discerning predictions as regards corporate media performance, Herman and Chomsky had further predicted that the PM itself would meet with such marginalisation and contempt.

In current theoretical and empirical studies of mass media performance, uses of the PM continue, nonetheless, to yield important insights into the workings of political and economic power in society, due in large measure to the model’s considerable explanatory power.

  • 1. Introduction
  • Part I: Theoretical and Methodological Considerations
    • 2. Interview with Edward S. Herman: Ideological Hegemony in Contemporary Societies
    • 3. What the Propaganda Model Can Learn from the Sociology of Journalism
    • 4. Journalism Studies’ Systematic Pursuit of Irrelevance: How Research Emphases Sabotage Critiques of Corporate-Run News Media
    • 5. Does the Propaganda Model Actually Theorise Propaganda?
  • Part II: The Internet and New Digital Media
    • 6. Propaganda 2.0: Herman and Chomsky’s Propaganda Model in the Age of the Internet, Big Data and Social Media
    • 7. System Security: A Missing Filter for the Propaganda Model?
    • 8. From #15M to Podemos: Updating the Propaganda Model for Explaining Political Change in Spain and the Role of Digital Media
    • 9. Anti-Communism and the Mainstream Online Press in Spain: Criticism of Podemos as a Strategy of a Two-Party System in Crisis
  • Part III: Screen Entertainment and Broadcast Media
    • 10. A Screen Entertainment Propaganda Model
    • 11. American Television: Manufacturing Consumerism
    • 12. The Sport of Shafting Fans and Taxpayers: An Application of the Propaganda Model to the Coverage of Professional Athletes and Team Owners
  • Part IV: Case Studies on Media and Power: The Interplay Between National and Global Elites
    • 13. The 2008 Financial Crisis, the Great Recession and Austerity in Britain: Analysing Media Coverage Using the Herman-Chomsky Propaganda Model
    • 14. Corporate-Market Power and Ideological Domination: The Propaganda Model after 30 Years – Relevance and Further Application
    • 15. Imperialism and Hegemonic Information in Latin America: The Media Coup in Venezuela vs. the Criminalisation of Protest in Mexico
    • 16. ‘Dynamic’ Obama Lectures ‘Bumbling’ Castro on Race Relations in Cuba, While Wilfully Blind to Black Lives Matter Movement in the US
    • 17. Thinking the Unthinkable about the Unthinkable – The Use of Nuclear Weapons and the Propaganda Model
    • 18. Conclusion
  • Index

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Metric Type Reporting Period Total Nov-2025 Dec-2025 Jan-2026 Feb-2026 Mar-2026 Apr-2026
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Citable Link
Published: 2018
Publisher: University of Westminster Press
License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license
Language: English
ISBN(s)
  • 978-1-912656-18-9 (epub)
  • 978-1-912656-16-5 (paperback)
  • 978-1-912656-17-2 (pdf)
  • 978-1-912656-19-6 (mobi)
Series
  • Critical, Digital and Social Media Studies
Subject
  • Propaganda
  • Press and Journalism
  • Public opinion and polls
  • Social issues and processes
  • Popular Culture
  • Media Studies

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  • Edward Herman5
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  • Broudy, Daniel3
  • Klaehn, Jeffery3
  • Pedro-Carañana, Joan3
  • Alford, Matthew2
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  • chapter18

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Introduction

Interview with Edward S. Herman: Ideological Hegemony in Contemporary Societies

What the Propaganda Model Can Learn from the Sociology of Journalism

Journalism Studies’ Systematic Pursuit of Irrelevance : How Research Emphases Sabotage Critiques of Corporate-Run News Media

Does the Propaganda Model Actually Theorise Propaganda?

Propaganda 2.0 : Herman and Chomsky’s Propaganda Model in the Age of the Internet, Big Data and Social Media

System Security: A Missing Filter for the Propaganda Model?

From #15M to Podemos : Updating the Propaganda Model for Explaining Political Change in Spain and the Role of Digital Media

Anti-Communism and the Mainstream Online Press in Spain : Criticism of Podemos as a Strategy of a Two-Party System in Crisis

A Screen Entertainment Propaganda Model

American Television: Manufacturing Consumerism

The Sport of Shafting Fans and Taxpayers: An Application of the Propaganda Model to the Coverage of Professional Athletes and Team Owners

The 2008 Financial Crisis, the Great Recession and Austerity in Britain : Analysing Media Coverage Using the Herman-Chomsky Propaganda Model

Corporate-Market Power and Ideological Domination: The Propaganda Model after 30 Years – Relevance and Further Application

Imperialism and Hegemonic Information in Latin America : The Media Coup in Venezuela vs. the Criminalization of Protest in Mexico

‘Dynamic’ Obama Lectures ‘Bumbling’ Castro on Race Relations in Cuba , While Wilfully Blind to Black Lives Matter Movement in the US

Thinking the Unthinkable about the Unthinkable – The Use of Nuclear Weapons and the Propaganda Model

Conclusion

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