Preface Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones Introduction: Intelligence Studies Now and Then Christopher R. Moran and Christopher J. Murphy Part I. American Intelligence Historiography 1. CIA History as a Cold War Battleground: The Forgotten First Wave of Agency Narratives Richard J. Aldrich 2. The Culture of Funding Culture: The CIA and the Congress for Cultural Freedom Eric Pullin 3. 'Real Substance, Not Just Symbolism'? The CIA and the Representation of Covert Operations in the Foreign Relations of the United States Series Matthew Jones and Paul McGarr 4.
Bonum Ex Malo: The Value of Legacy of Ashes in Teaching CIA History Nicholas Dujmovic 5. Narrating Covert Action: The CIA, Historiography and the Cold War Kaeten Mistry 6. FBI Historiography: From Leader to Organisation Melissa Graves 7. Reconceiving Realism: Intelligence Historians and the Fact/Fiction Dichotomy Simon Willmetts 8. The Reality is Stranger than Fiction: Anglo-American Intelligence Cooperation from World War Two through the Cold War Frederick P. Hitz Part II. British Intelligence Historiography 9. A Plain Tale of Pundits, Players and Professionals: The Historiography of the Great Game Robert Johnson 10.
No Cloaks, No Daggers: The Historiography of British Military Intelligence Jim Beach 11. The Study of Interrogation: A Focus on Torture, But What About the Intelligence? Samantha Newbery 12. Whitehall, Intelligence and Official History: Editing SOE in France Christopher J. Murphy 13. A Tale of Torture? Alexander Scotland, The London Cage and Post-War British Secrecy Daniel Lomas 14. 1968 - 'A Year to Remember' for the Study of British Intelligence? Adam D. M. Svendsen 15.
Their Trade is Treachery: A Retrospective Chapman Pincher 16. Intelligence and 'Official History' Christopher Baxter and Keith Jeffery Index.