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Selling Apartheid: South Africa's Global Propaganda War

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In Selling Apartheid, journalist Ron Nixon brings to light a mostly forgotten aspect of the long battle over apartheid: the global propaganda campaign waged by the South African government in an attempt to bolster support for the regime. Drawing on interviews with key players and thousands of previously unavailable documents from US, British, and South African archives, Nixon offers a detailed picture of a $100 million annual campaign that drew on an elaborate network of support from corporations, conservative religious organizations, and even an unlikely Cold War coalition of liberal black clergy and anticommunist black conservatives aligned with right-wing politicians. The result is a fascinating look at how the image of apartheid was managed, and the regime supported, despite fifty years of struggle and protest.
 

256 pages, Paperback

First published June 17, 2015

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Ron Nixon

2 books

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Richard Marney.
766 reviews47 followers
January 2, 2023
A “who dunnit” rather than an analytical, historical survey.

The book focuses on a phenomenon through which a generation lived ( including me), where The South African government employed substantial financial resources and a global network of PR firms, journalists, lobbyists and sympathetic politicians to spin the fable that apartheid was actually beneficial to the exploited racial classes.

The book is Informative like a well-written newspaper article but not enlightening as one would have hoped as a serious history…..I guess is a way of putting it!

Having grown up in the US as the country struggled to throw off its Jim Crow past, I realized then as now that many in the country who didn’t / don’t need help from Pretoria to oppose the relaxation of the heinous system of apartheid or similar attitudes today.
Profile Image for Daniel Connolly.
Author 1 book14 followers
June 26, 2024
“Selling Apartheid” focuses on the public relations campaign that South Africa’s apartheid government conducted over a period of decades: creating supposedly neutral front groups that secretly backed South Africa, recruiting Black spokespersons in support of the apartheid government, co-opting reporters and editors through soft bribes such as free trips to Africa.

All of this took place many years ago. But as I read it, I kept thinking about the present day.

At the most fundamental level, “Selling Apartheid” illustrates how a surprising number of people are willing to sell out their values and shill for a horrible government in exchange for cash.

We see echoes of all this in today’s public relations campaigns in favor of obviously bad things: for the tobacco lobby, for unlimited use of fossil fuels, for the governments of dictatorships such as China and Russia.

Yes, this is a book about a South African government that no longer exists. But "Selling Apartheid" offers broader insights into human avarice and unethical public relations campaigns – insights that will help this book remain relevant for many years to come.
Profile Image for Neil Webb.
198 reviews1 follower
March 10, 2021
Really engaging book. For those interested in the intersection of politics and media studies would be ideal.
60 reviews2 followers
May 7, 2021
Informative but kinda slow. I cant believe that we as a society have used the fear of communism as the sole argument against any policy no matter what that betters the lives of the people smh
Profile Image for Maryam Ibrahim.
39 reviews4 followers
July 28, 2020
As a South African student journalist, I was immediately intrigued by this book because I always wondered how Apartheid was viewed by the rest of the world and how it lasted this long when gross violations of human rights were enacted by the South African government.

Ron Nixon’s book called Selling Apartheid tells us all about the South African governments plight to keep their Apartheid ideology afloat and accommodating to the rest of the world, while the rest of the world did not agree with Apartheid.

Nothing is a one-way street in the realm of media and propaganda. The South African government at the time could not keep their ideology above water for long but surprisingly did a really good job at selling it to the main microphone of the world known as the United States.

Having several public relation firms in the United States and spending millions of dollars on perfecting South Africa’s image to the rest of the world, the South African government held close to the United States.

The book itself makes me crave for more information out there, and how to get it. it makes me wonder if those organizations are actually disbanded? Where are those people now? Are they still withholding some records?

Further I question the TRC’s leniency with this campaign of selling Apartheid. By far it also showed me a side of South Africa I hope never comes to light ever again, a desperate attempt to sell a brand whereby your worth is depicted by your skin.








Profile Image for John.
33 reviews25 followers
July 17, 2016
I found this a fascinating read in terms of the topic and the book is well written. A little personal knowledge of what has gone down in recent SA history helps to make more sense of the characters and their machinations.
Various SA Govt workers of the 60s to 90s were able to influence and change some parts of South African history and, in the end, may have delayed the failing of their era by a little. For me, the incredible Public relations industry found in the US is also noteworthy. Without their paid help and their turning of a blind eye to the real motives of the employer, there would have been a quicker end to Apartheid.
I wonder how much more of this truth distortion is happening right now in all countries. And we, as the general public, have no chance of knowing the extent until the memoirs are eventually written.
Profile Image for John.
33 reviews25 followers
July 17, 2016
I found this a fascinating read in terms of the topic and the book is well written. A little personal knowledge of what has gone down in recent SA history helps to make more sense of the characters and their machinations.
Various SA Govt workers of the 60s to 90s were able to influence and change some parts of South African history and, in the end, may have delayed the failing of their era by a little. For me, the incredible Public relations industry found in the US is also noteworthy. Without their paid help and their turning of a blind eye to the real motives of the employer, there would have been a quicker end to Apartheid.
I wonder how much more of this truth distortion is happening right now in all countries. And we, as the general public, have no chance of knowing the extent until the memoirs are eventually written.
Profile Image for Jeff.
206 reviews54 followers
October 5, 2018
If you do Palestine solidarity work, this is a MUST-READ. Otherwise, I'm not sure -- it has this weird feel, it kinda reads like it's a summary of another bigger book rather than a book itself? Each chapter sort of lists out a bunch of facts about a particular campaign/deal/etc. undertaken by the Apartheid regime, but then there are no in-text citations, and the citations in the back of the book... well none of them actually covered any of the things in the main text that I wanted to check. But regardless it's an important read, I feel like it's a very *not* well-documented topic [and this means there's low-hanging fruit, to write a more detailed+cited version of this book :P]
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