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The Publisher Almenna Bókafélagið and The Icelandic Committee of The Congress for Cultural Freedom, 1950−1960

Author:
Haukur Ingvarsson
Issue
Saga: Tímarit Sögufélags 2016 LIV: II
Year:
2016
Pages:
54-89
DOI:
Keywords:
The Publisher Almenna bókafélagið and the Icelandic Committee of the Congress for Cultural Freedom, 1950–1960 In recent years, scholars dealing with the Cultural Cold War and the anti-Communist Congress for Cultural Freedom have studied relations between the CCF headquarters and the CCF branch offices operated in at least 35 countries. Based in Paris, the headquarters were clandestinely managed by officials of the American CIA, which also financed the organisation in general. The article mainly discusses how operations of the Icelandic CCF office, which was established in March 1957, were affected by the inclusion of Iceland in CCF policy-making for the Nordic region. The publisher Almenna Bókafélagið served as a basis for operating the Icelandic CCF, as this publisher provided a robust infrastructure of people who had a range of experience, influence in various social fields and a network of connections that extended into periodicals and daily newspapers. The article’s two-pronged conclusions are on the one hand that the Danish branch office, in consultation with CCF headquarters in Paris, saw to organising visits by foreigners to Iceland. Icelanders appear to have had little say in choosing such guests, with the CCF footing the bill for visitor costs. The second concluding revelation is that CCF policy is evident in the subject matter chosen for three different Icelandic periodicals, though it may come as a surprise that the main impact was a greater emphasis on cultural material, avant-garde Icelandic poetry and abstract art. Correspondingly, the periodicals demonstrate less emphasis on anti-Communist propaganda.