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[ecrea] new book: The Arab-Israeli Conflict in the Arab Press: The First Three Decades
Wed Oct 31 18:32:12 GMT 2018
Intellect is delighted to announce that The Arab-Israeli Conflict in the
Arab Pres <https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/books/view-Book,id=5318/>s/:
The First Three Decades/
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/books/view-Book,id=5318/> is now
available.
This monograph provides a much-needed history of Arab print media as
well as an in-depth study of translated Arab media sources, remedying a
remarkable gap in western intellectual culture. Setting the scene, the
manuscript begins with a brief historical narrative of Arab newspapers
from the 1940s to the mid-1970s, when a free press virtually
disappeared. William Haddad then explores the historiography of the Arab
print media, compiling a valuable collection of available scholarship on
the subject. The book simultaneously considers the contemporary ongoing
problem of censorship in Middle East journalism. With this valuable
context Haddad then sets about examining the Arab print media’s view of
the Arab-Israeli conflict in its first three decades. By giving voice to
the Arab political journalists who wrote editorials and opinion pieces,
the bulk of the book explores the variety of opinions held in the Arab
print media regarding the Arab-Israeli conflict.
'William Haddad’s scholarly account of how the Arab press has covered
the Arab-Israeli conflict over the last half century is a welcome and
long overdue contribution to our collective knowledge of the conflicting
narratives of Israelis, Palestinians and other Arabs. The inclusion of a
wide range of newspapers from a number of different Arab nations
highlights both the similarities and differences of press coverage
within the Arab world. Arab editorials on the conflict are also put
within a global perspective. The general low level of proficiency in
Arabic in most of the western world, as well as deeply embedded cultural
and political biases, has resulted in the Arab press being largely
ignored, understudied or worse, misrepresented in the West; this book is
a major contribution in filling that gap. '– Janice J. Terry is
professor emeritus of modern Middle Eastern history at Eastern Michigan
University and adjunct professor at the Institute of Learning in
Retirement and Marietta College, Ohio.
For more information about this title, please click here
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/books/view-Book,id=5318/> or email
(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com) <mailto:(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com)>.
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