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Counter-propaganda and spy fever: Germans in Washington, DC, during world war I
Stefan Manz
, Mark Benbow
Centre for Critical Inquiry into Society and Culture (CCISC)
Aston Centre for Applied Linguistics (ACAL)
School of Social Sciences and Humanities
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Dive into the research topics of 'Counter-propaganda and spy fever: Germans in Washington, DC, during world war I'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Arts & Humanities
Fever
100%
World War I
87%
Spies
80%
Washington, D.C.
77%
Propaganda
61%
Sabotage
47%
Immigrant Communities
46%
Internment
45%
Compatriots
43%
Connectedness
41%
Expulsion
37%
Atmosphere
37%
Totality
35%
Accusations
35%
Suppression
35%
Suspicion
34%
Proximity
33%
Minorities
33%
Diasporas
32%
Theoretical Framework
32%
Warfare
31%
Utterance
30%
Loyalty
29%
Enemy
29%
Social Sciences
First World War
83%
propaganda
77%
sabotage
46%
expulsion
43%
totality
42%
suppression
38%
warfare
35%
loyalty
35%
diaspora
35%
immigrant
24%
minority
23%
leader
22%
narrative
21%