The Committee on Public Information, the major American propaganda
agency during World War I, attracted a wide range of
reform-oriented men and women who tried to generate enthusiasm for
Wilson's international and domestic ideals. Vaughn shows that the
CPI encouraged an imperial presidency, urged limits on free speech
and called for an almost mystical attachment to the nation, but it
also tried to present dispassionately the causes of American
intervention in the war.
Originally published in 1980.
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