Home History Chapter 4 THE ENEMY WITHIN (De)Dramatizing the Cold War in U.S. and West German Spy TV from the 1960s
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Chapter 4 THE ENEMY WITHIN (De)Dramatizing the Cold War in U.S. and West German Spy TV from the 1960s

  • Marcus M. Payk
View more publications by Berghahn Books
Cold War Cultures
This chapter is in the book Cold War Cultures
© 2022, Berghahn Books, New York, Oxford

© 2022, Berghahn Books, New York, Oxford

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. ILLUSTRATIONS ix
  4. EUROPEAN COLD WAR CULTURE(S)? An Introduction 1
  5. Part I MEDIATING THE COLD WAR Radio, Film, Television, and Literature
  6. Chapter 1 EAST EUROPEAN COLD WAR CULTURE(S) Alterities, Commonalities, and Film Industries 23
  7. Chapter 2 “WE STARTED THE COLD WAR” A Hidden Message behind Stalin’s Attack on Anna Akhmatova 55
  8. Chapter 3 RADIO REFORM IN THE 1980S RIAS and DT-64 Respond to Private Radio 76
  9. Chapter 4 THE ENEMY WITHIN (De)Dramatizing the Cold War in U.S. and West German Spy TV from the 1960s 94
  10. Chapter 5 COLD WAR TELEVISION Olga Korbut and the Munich Olympics of 1972 112
  11. Part II CONSTRUCTING IDENTITIES Representations of the “Self”
  12. Chapter 6 CATHOLIC PIETY IN THE EARLY COLD WAR YEARS, OR How the Virgin Mary Protected the West from Communism 129
  13. Chapter 7 THE ROAD TO SOCIALISM PAVED WITH GOOD INTENTIONS Automobile Culture in the Soviet Union, Romania, and the GDR During Détente 152
  14. Chapter 8 ADVERTISING, EMOTIONS, AND “HIDDEN PERSUADERS” The Making of Cold-War Consumer Culture in Britain from the 1940s to the 1960s 172
  15. Chapter 9 SURVIVAL IN THE WELFARE COCOON The Culture of Civil Defense in Cold War Sweden 191
  16. Part III CROSSING THE BORDER Interactions with the “Other”
  17. Chapter 10 THE PEACE AND THE WAR CAMPS The Dichotomous Cold War Culture in Czechoslovakia: 1948–1960 213
  18. Chapter 11 ARTISTIC STYLE, CANONIZATION, AND IDENTITY POLITICS IN COLD WAR GERMANY, 1947–1960 235
  19. Chapter 12 WHAT DOES DEMOCRACY LOOK LIKE? (AND WHY WOULD ANYONE WANT TO BUY IT?) Third World Demands and West German Responses at 1960s World Youth Festivals 254
  20. Chapter 13 DRAWING THE EAST-WEST BORDER Narratives of Modernity and Identity in the Northeastern Adriatic (1947–1954) 276
  21. Part IV THE LEGACIES OF THE COLD WAR Remembrance and Historiography
  22. Chapter 14 A 1950S REVIVAL Cold War Culture in Reunified Germany 299
  23. Chapter 15 THE MIKSON CASE War Crimes Memory, Estonian Identity Reconstructions, and the Transnational Politics of Justice 321
  24. Chapter 16 THE FIRST COLD WAR MEMORIAL IN BERLIN A Short Inquiry into Europe, the Cold War, and Memory Cultures 347
  25. NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS 370
  26. INDEX 374
Downloaded on 3.1.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780857452443-006/html?lang=en
Scroll to top button