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Influencers as New Propaganda Tools
O książce
They do not wear uniforms or carry party cards. They speak directly into your ear, recommend products, share opinions, and build communities of trust—sometimes numbering in the millions. Yet the influencer, for all their apparent spontaneity, is the latest iteration of one of history's oldest instruments: the trusted voice deployed in service of a larger agenda. Influencers as New Propaganda Tools examines how digital creators became the most effective persuasion infrastructure of the early twenty-first century.
This book traces the genealogy of influence from wartime celebrity endorsements and Cold War cultural diplomacy to the rise of social media platforms that gamified attention and monetized belief. It shows how state actors, corporations, and political campaigns discovered that authentic-seeming personal voices outperform traditional advertising and institutional messaging by orders of magnitude—and how entire influence industries were quietly built around that discovery.
Drawing on platform data, declassified influence operation reports, and the testimony of former campaign strategists, this is a rigorous and timely history of how consent is manufactured in the age of the algorithm—and why the most effective propaganda no longer looks like propaganda at all.
