『The “G-Men” Naming Myth – Media Fabrication and the Psychology of Institutional Branding (1933)』のカバーアート

The “G-Men” Naming Myth – Media Fabrication and the Psychology of Institutional Branding (1933)

The “G-Men” Naming Myth – Media Fabrication and the Psychology of Institutional Branding (1933)

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The enduring legend claims that gangster George “Machine Gun” Kelly surrendered to federal agents in 1933 while shouting “Don’t shoot, G-Men!” — a dramatic phrase that supposedly birthed the iconic nickname for FBI personnel. Historical analysis reveals this episode as a masterful public relations construct, amplified by J. Edgar Hoover’s Bureau and sympathetic media months after the arrest, transforming a routine capture into a cornerstone of federal law enforcement mythology. This case exemplifies the psychology of myth-making, media influence on authority perception, and strategic narrative curation, offering enduring lessons in how institutions shape collective memory and public trust long before the digital age
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