Books on public relations usually place undue emphasis on the minutiae of public relations. This book uses a different approach. It considers what it is, what relation it has to society, how it approaches a problem, and how that approach is made.
Edward L. Bernays was an Austrian-American pioneer in the field of public relations and propaganda, referred to in his obituary as "the father of public relations".
A bit dated considering the advent of the internet plays a major role now in the topics this book presents, and which I'm sure has "changed the game" in a major way, but still a very interesting volume and I think mostly still applicable today.
As the writer states: Books on public relations usually place undue emphasis on the minutiae of public relations. This book uses a different approach. It considers what it is, what relation it has to society, how it approaches a problem, and how that approach is made.
This is a wonderful book about the practical methods to make people believe the non-sense you want them to. It includes many of the important ideas in great advertising including the idea that people should not realize it's advertising, but think it's unbiassed news. Many of these techniques are innovations of Bernays himself, a nephew of Freud, and a long-standing fixture on Madison Avenue.