University of North Carolina, Department of History, Chapel Hill, 2006.
The Sources of the American Counter-Myth
Historiography and Themes
Soviet Consciousness and Soviet Sources
STALIN’S SCRIPT FOR ANTI-AMERICANISM:
PATRIOTISM AND PROPAGANDA, 1945-51
After the War: Soviet Reality and the Anticosmopolitan Campaign
The Two Americas: Anti-Americanism in the Theaters
Favorite Anti-American Authors
Acceptable Americans
Soviet Anti-Americanism in Context
EXPERIENCING THE MYTH OF AMERICA, 1943-56
The Anti-Soviet Soviet Union: Standards for Behavior and the
Alternative Myth
Fear of a Renewed War: From World War to Cold War
Technology and the Well-Off Worker
The Most Democratic Country in the World: Soviet Style
Democracy and the Cult of the Leader
The Myth of America and Soviet Socialism
Perceptions and Propaganda — Agency and Dissent
PROPAGANDA WARS: IN LIEU OF CULTURAL RELATIONS, 1945-53
The American Cultural Offensive in the Soviet Union
A Modern Day El Dorado!: Soviet Reactions to American Propaganda
A Soviet Peace Offensive: Fighting the Propaganda War at Home and Abroad
Organized Interactions: Soviet Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries
Rare Encounters with American Culture and Americans
MISSION IMPOSSIBLE? TELLING THE TRUTH ABOUT SOVIET
SOCIALISM, 1955-58
The Spirit of Geneva and the Legacy of 1955
The Revival of Soviet-American Cultural Relations
Rethinking Soviet Propaganda for Americans
Soviet Strategies for Impression Management
Correct Conclusions About the Soviet Union
CELEBRATING, CONTROLLING, COEXISTING: KHRUSHCHEV AND THE WEST, 1957-59
The Purposes of Peaceful Coexistence
A Celebration of the Socialist Way of Life: The 1957 Moscow Youth Festival
Be Careful, Premier Khrushchev: Official Cultural Relations with the United States
Breaking the Ice of the Cold War: Public Presentations of Peaceful Coexistence
Experiencing America: The Possibilities of Peaceful Coexistence
The Legacy of Peaceful Coexistence