Stories Are Weapons
Psychological Warfare and the American Mind
18 July 2025
Territory Rights — Worldwide.
Description
A sharp and timely exploration of the dark art of manipulation through weaponised storytelling, from the best-selling author of Four Lost Cities
In Stories Are Weapons, Annalee Newitz traces the way disinformation, propaganda and violent threats—the essential tool kit for psychological warfare—have evolved from military weapons deployed against foreign adversaries into tools in culture wars. Newitz delves into America’s deep-rooted history with psychological operations, beginning with Benjamin Franklin’s Revolutionary War–era fake newspaper and nineteenth-century wars on Indigenous nations, and reaching its apotheosis with the Cold War and twenty-first-century influence campaigns online. America’s secret weapon has long been coercive storytelling. And there’s a reason for that: operatives who shaped modern psychological warfare drew on their experiences as science fiction writers and in the advertising industry.
Now, through a weapons-transfer programme long unacknowledged, psyops have found their way into the hands of culture warriors, transforming democratic debates into toxic wars over American identity. Newitz zeroes in on conflicts over race and intelligence, school board fights over LGBT students and campaigns against feminist viewpoints, revealing how, in each case, specific groups of Americans are singled out and treated as enemies of the state. Crucially, Newitz delivers a powerful counter-narrative, speaking with the researchers and activists who are outlining a pathway to achieving psychological disarmament and cultural peace.
Incisive and essential, Stories are Weapons reveals how our minds have been turned into blood-soaked battlegrounds—and how we can put down our weapons to build something better.
Reviews
"An exploration of our culture wars' roots in psychological warfare…Newitz is so skillful at elucidating such a tangled, morally contentious history that I never felt lost." — Jennifer Szalai, The New York Times
"Annalee Newitz always sees to the heart of complex systems and breaks them down with poetic ferocity." — N.K. Jemisin, author of the Broken Earth trilogy
"Annalee Newitz’s thoroughly researched and masterfully crafted book gives us something hopeful—a way to disarm the narratives that have been used against us and reclaim better ones." — Ed Yong, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of An Immense World
"A brilliant historical deep-dive into psyops, military covert influence operations, and the corporate attempts to conquer the mind. This will change the way you understand America." — Molly Crabapple, author of Drawing Blood
"A penetrating, passionately-reasoned analysis of how propaganda and disinformation have been used as tactics of both hard and soft wars, and how we continue to be manipulated today. This is a storyteller’s account of the devastating force of storytelling." — Angela Saini, author of The Patriarchs