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This unique collection contains reviews of recent and classical publications of interest to the public diplomacy community reviewed by public diplomacy practitioners and scholars. The opinions represented in the CPD Book Reviews are the authors' own and do not necessarily reflect the position and views of the USC Center on Public Diplomacy at the Annenberg School.

The USC Center on Public Diplomacy invites book review submissions from scholars, researchers, practitioners and professionals. To read the Call for Book Reviews, click here



VOICE OF AMERICA – A HISTORY
By Alan L. Heil, Jr.


Reviewed by Morand Fachot
OCT 24, 2007





This review first appeared in International Affairs The Voice of America (VOA), which broadcasts more than 1,000 hours of programmes in 45 languages to an estimated audience of some 115 million worldwide, is the world’s second largest international broadcaster, yet within the USA itself it is “America’s best-kept secret”. Alan L. Heil, Jr., who spent 36 years at the Voice, beginning as a newswriter trainee to retire as deputy director after holding several positions including Middle East correspondent and chief of News and Current Affairs, was uniquely placed to write this comprehensive and captivating insight into a “great, sometimes heroic, but fragile and endangered national institution”, stretching from the launch of the service, in February 1942, to its 60th anniversary. Ever since going on air for the first time, telling its German listeners: “Here speaks a voice from America (...) The news may be good. The news may be bad. We shall tell you the truth”, the Voice has been constantly striving to uphold its editorial independence in the face of persistent political pressures and to secure appropriate funding. Heil’s detailed account of the Voice’s advances and setbacks, always set in the broader US and international contexts, shows the importance attached by successive US administrations to international broadcasting in their public diplomacy strategy. Yet, Heil’s record of the often considerable pressures from all official quarters involved in foreign policy – from the White House down to US diplomats abroad – to influence editorial content, shows how US public diplomacy itself has suffered (and continues to suffer) from this constant interference into VOA’s operations. Heil peppers his account with transcripts of radio broadcasts and personal anecdotes from dozens of VOA staff and listeners, which give this sizeable book its distinctive – and often moving or amusing – human dimension. In his “tales of great VOA escapes” Heil describes the extraordinary backgrounds of some of the Voice’s foreign staff who have made a major contribution to its reputation over the years. Many of Heil’s descriptions of the work at VOA apply to similar services in other countries and depict the very specific features that make international broadcasting such a distinctive craft: in particular, a meticulous respect for the specificities and sensitivities of foreign audiences and the care taken in transposing concepts and ideas in other languages and for people of different cultural backgrounds. Over the years VOA has developed a number of unique programmes which have contributed to its popularity and to the spread of American values abroad. Notable among those are music and VOA Special English programmes. The latter, using a vocabulary of about 1,500 words only, are read at a much slower speed than VOA’s standard English programmes. Broadcast since 1959, they have proved very popular. Music, “the universal language”, has contributed to VOA’s reputation abroad. Heil recalls, in particular, the role played by Willis Conover in bringing jazz to millions of listeners throughout the world, most notably in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, for over 40 years. The…...  -->

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