Crystallizing Public Opinion

audiobook

Crystallizing Public Opinion

by Edward L. Bernays

EN·~4 hours·23 chapters

Chapters

23 total
1

Crystallizing Public Opinion

0:24
2

PREFACE TO NEW EDITION

2:17
3

FOREWORD

1:49
4

PART I

0:00
5

CRYSTALLIZING PUBLIC OPINION - CHAPTER I THE SCOPE OF THE PUBLIC RELATIONS COUNSEL

30:14
6

CHAPTER II

20:46
7

CHAPTER III

10:34
8

PART II

0:00
9

CHAPTER I

10:21
10

CHAPTER II

10:04

Description

Offering one of the earliest systematic looks at the emerging field of public relations, this work lays out the core ideas that still shape how organizations communicate with the public. Drawing on insights from psychologists, sociologists and seasoned journalists, the author blends theory with vivid real‑world examples that illustrate how counsel can influence opinion and behavior. Readers will see how the text maps the responsibilities of the new profession to the needs of industry, government, labor and other institutions.

The book stresses that any organization must respect public sentiment and adapt its actions to maintain goodwill in a rapidly changing social landscape. Through clear explanations and case studies drawn from the author's own experience, it encourages a scientific, evidence‑based approach to shaping messages. Listeners gain a foundational understanding of the principles that continue to guide modern public‑relations practice and its impact on everyday life.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (247K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Tim Lindell, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)

Release date

2020-02-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Edward L. Bernays

Edward L. Bernays

1891–1995

A master of persuasion who helped shape modern public relations, he turned psychology and mass communication into powerful tools for business and politics. His ideas remain influential—and controversial—because they changed how institutions learned to win public opinion.

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