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[Commlist] New Issue 12.2 of the Journal of Arab Media Research published
Thu Dec 12 13:50:36 GMT 2019
I am pleased to announce the publication of Issue 12.2 of the /Journal
of Arab and Muslim Media Research/ (JAMMR) which has an interesting line
up of timely papers. The journal is an international refereed academic
platform, published by Intellect in the UK. You may access the papers of
this issue as well as other issues from the JAMMR’s homepage.
https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-arab-muslim-media-research
I am hoping you will find this publication a valuable resource for
research about media, communication and society in the Arab World and
the Middle East.
*__*
*_Issue: 12.2-_*
Volume (12): Issue (2); December 2019.
*A new transnational arena? An analysis of cross-border web traffic
towards professional online news sites in the Arab world*
* Authors: Andrea Haeuptli
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/andrea-haeuptli>
* Page: 145-167
* DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00001_1
*Abstract*
In recent years, Arab news industries have been confronted with an
unparalleled increase in demand for journalistic offers. In parallel,
Internet penetration throughout the Arab world has increased
significantly, leading to a shift of consumption away from traditional
channels towards the digital realm. This paper addresses the impact of
those recent developments on a shared transnational communicative arena
throughout the Arab world. It includes geographically disaggregated
traffic data of 630 inductively collected professional online news
sources. Using a network analysis approach, it has been assessed that
indeed, cross-border consumption of professional online news is a common
and general feature in the region. Traffic flows between the countries
are highly diversified without patterns of sub-segmentation. At the same
time, the strength of traffic flows reflects the traditional leading
role of the media industries in the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Saudi
Arabia and Qatar. Yet, weaker traffic flows between the other Arab
countries are common and diverse, leading to a high over-all integration
of the Arab transnational communicative arena within the digital realm.
**
*Digitally mediated martyrdom: The role of the visual in political Arab
activist culture*
* Authors: Kelly Lewis <https://www.intellectbooks.com/kelly-lewis>
* Page: 169-189
* DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00002_1
*Abstract***
Digitally mediated images depicting death and martyrdom as a trope of
resistance and contestation against oppressive regimes emerged as
recurring and critical instruments of dissent during the Arab uprisings
of 2010-11. While the trope of death and martyrdom as a form of
political expression and resistance is not a new phenomenon in the
Middle East, the affordances of digital and social media technologies
have brought forth new opportunities for activists and everyday citizens
to construct, circulate, and communicate martyr narratives. Drawing from
literature in visual politics, digital activist culture, and media and
communication, this textual and iconographical analysis of visual tropes
focuses on the brutal killing of Egyptian youth Khaled Said, on his
construction as a posthumous injustice symbol, and on his subsequent
transformation as a martyr of the 2011 Egyptian Revolution. Activists
and everyday citizens participated in symbolically resurrecting Said
/in/ and /through/ digitally mediated images and transforming him into a
martyr to represent the popular struggle for social justice and
universal human rights. The article examines how Said is /made a martyr/
through complex creative processes of recurrent visual appropriation,
mediation, re-appropriation, and remediation. It shows that the creative
authorship of martyrdom is increasingly hybridised, decentralised, and
driven by a memetic protest dynamic. The article proposes the term
/digitally mediated martyrdom/ to designate the emergence of a new kind
of visually-oriented, socially constructed, and ritualised protest
dynamic. It develops the conceptual framework for understanding
digitally mediated martyrdom as a contemporary political practice within
activist cultures and popular social justice movements. It also argues
digitally mediated martyrdom represents the emergence of a new and
transnational protest dynamic.
**
*Social media and power in the Arab world: From dominant ideology to
popular agency*
* Authors: Mazhar Al-Zo’by
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/mazhar-al-zoby>
* Page: 191-211
* DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00003_1
*Abstract: *
Conceptualizing the social and political possibilities of digital mass
mediated communication in modern societies has generated a critical
debate, ranging from proponents who conceive of its promising profound
potential to skeptics who dismiss it as a trivial socio-political
vacuity. For some observers in the field, social media has been
mobilized to maintain hegemonic structures through a ‘weaponization’ of
popular narratives on behalf of the dominant political elite. For
others, social media discourse has signaled the end of grand narratives
of political ideology, and has ultimately ushered in the age of
subjective digital narcissism not unlike that of consumer culture in
late capitalist societies. Beyond these two broader frameworks of
inquiry, this paper seeks to investigate the critical agency, popular
sovereignty, and transformative possibilities in socio-digital discourse
in the modern Arab Gulf region. Recognizing the dominant and residual
ideology within social media narratives, the paper deploys Raymond
Williams’ critical and insightful concept of ‘structures of feeling’
in order to critically assess the alternative emergent collective
expressions that diverge from, yet respond to, hegemonic and dominant
discourse. One of the main goals of this paper, therefore, is to go
beyond the conventional analysis of “utopian versus dystopian” binary
instumentalization of social media in the region, to challenge the claim
that media (both as technology and technique) determine social and
political consciousness. More specifically, and in contrast to McLuhan’s
famed dictum that ‘the medium is the message’, this papers contends that
digital and social media virtues and contributions are not confined to
the instrumental communication that serves practical purposes. Rather,
and more fundamentally, digital and social media involve the practices
and lived experiences of individuals, culture and society, especially
those that constitute the formations of collective and emergent identities.
*Redefining #YourAverageMuslim woman: Muslim female digital activism on
social media*
* Authors: Inaash Islam <https://www.intellectbooks.com/inaash-islam>
* Page: 213-233
* DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00004_1
*Abstract: *
Orientalist discourses have largely shaped how Muslim women have come to
be represented in western visual media as oppressed, subjugated, or
foreign. However, with the advent of social media platforms, Muslim
women are utilizing social media spaces to rearticulate the controlling
images promulgated through orientalist narratives. This article examines
the complex relationship visual media shares with Muslim women, and
demonstrates that the lens of orientalism continues to structure the
imaginaries that shape visual representations of Muslim women in art,
news and film. This paper addresses how visual platforms and social
media spaces such as YouTube, are being utilized by Muslim women to
undertake digital activism that seeks to subvert essentialist
narratives. At the center of this discussion is YouTuber Dina Tokio’s
2017 documentary, titled “#YourAverageMuslim,” which tackles western
preconceived notions, and instead offers a redefined version of the
‘Muslim woman’ predicated on resisting three narratives: 1)
Muslim-Woman-As-Oppressed 2) Muslim-Woman-As-Subjugated, and 3)
Muslim-Woman-As-Foreign-Other. This documentary clearly demonstrates how
Muslim women are using social media platforms in specific ways to shape
the discourses around Muslim women. In doing so they are demonstrating
their agentic capabilities, taking control of their representations, and
speaking for themselves instead of being spoken for by others.
*Beyond the ‘online’: Iranian women’s non-movement of resistance*
* Authors: Helia Asgari <https://www.intellectbooks.com/helia-asgari>,
Katharine Sarikakis
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/katharine-sarikakis>
* Page: 235-252
* DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00005_1
*Abstract*
In many undemocratic countries where conservative law and patriarchal
ideas are in place, women are considered second-class citizens
particularly in domains of public life. After Iran’s Islamic revolution,
Iranian women were confronted with a theocratic regime, which imposed
laws and norms, which limited women’s activities and violated earned
liberties.
The activities of women under non-democratic states and patriarchal
systems are thwarted by the repressive measures of authoritarian states
as well as patriarchal society and hostile attitudes of ordinary men and
women. New normative frameworks and practices imposed gender segregation
in various aspects. During these years, women attempt to resist these
policies, not by deliberate organized campaigns but through daily
practices in public life. Asef Bayat calls these kind of resistance and
activities “social non-movement”.
This article focuses on a rather under-researched form of social
activism and attempts to describe the way in which social media might be
supportive tools for women aiming to build active networks and
communicative spaces to deliberate on challenges to their lives. At the
same time, these spaces function as the civic training ground where
representations of political demands for social change put forth. This
article discusses ways in which social media have been used as platforms
where women’s demands, among others, hold identity dimensions as well as
violation of their basic and human rights.
*Ikhwanweb: A digital archive for a post-Islamist movement?*
* Authors: Paolo d’Urbano <https://www.intellectbooks.com/paolo-durbano>
* Page: 253-272
* DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00006_1
*Abstract:*
The paper looks at /Ikhwanweb/, the English website of the Egyptian
Muslim Brotherhood (MB), from its early days and through the years
before the 25th January revolution. The archive is used as a theoretical
concept to capture both the symbolic and material struggles that the MB
faced while trying to articulate its political vision. As a nodal point
where power and knowledge intersect, the concept of archive was first
theorised by Foucault and Derrida. /Ikhwanweb/is examined as a digital
archive, a site for both knowledge and memory production. The first
section deals with the main analytical concept; the second tells the
troubled history of the material infrastructure required to run the
website. Then two main threads are identified and examined. The need to
distantiate the organisation from political violence and that of
reaching out ‘the West’ shaped the content of /Ikhwanweb/. The website
also allowed the group to interact directly with policy-making circles
and research institutions. Can this be said to be part of that process
Bayat calls post-islamism? The concluding section reflects on this
question and suggests a more ambivalent picture.
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