(Mis)Translating Deceit(Mis)Translating Deceit
  • Home
  • About
  • Aims and objectives
  • Core Team Members
  • Associate Team Members
  • Affiliated Projects
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • Publications
  • Public and Policy Engagement
  • Research Events
  • Project Blog
  • Resources
  • Legacy blogs
     
    (Mis)Translating Deceit(Mis)Translating Deceit
      • Home
      • About
      • Aims and objectives
      • Core Team Members
      • Associate Team Members
      • Affiliated Projects
      • Contact
      • Newsletter
      • Publications
      • Public and Policy Engagement
      • Research Events
      • Project Blog
      • Resources
      • Legacy blogs
      1. Home
      2. Publications
      3. Relevant, non-project funded, team-member outputs
      4. ‘Performing Disinformation: a Muddled History and its Consequences’

      ‘Performing Disinformation: a Muddled History and its Consequences’


      ‘Performing Disinformation: a Muddled History and its Consequences’

      This brief introduction to the history of uses of the term, disinformation, was authored by Vera Tolz and Stephen Hutchings. It appeared on the LSE Politics Blog (Media@LSE Blog) on 10 August, 2021. It is available at: https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/medialse/2021/10/08/performing-disinformation-a-muddled-history-and-its-consequences/

      •  
      •  
      •  
      Labor für die Russische Welt: Selbstbild und Nation im Donbass [Laboratory for the Russian World: Self-Image and Nation in Donbas]
      Suspicious stories: taking narrative seriously in disinformation research
      Disinformation as process: modeling the lifecycle of deceit
      (Mis)Translating Deceit
      Copyright © 2025 All rights reserved
      • Home
      • About
      • Aims and objectives
      • Core Team Members
      • Associate Team Members
      • Affiliated Projects
      • Contact
      • Newsletter
      • Publications
      • Public and Policy Engagement
      • Research Events
      • Project Blog
      • Resources
      • Legacy blogs
       
      •  
      •  
      •  
       
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •