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[Commlist] New Journal Issue 13.1 (April 2020) out now (JAMMR)
Sat Apr 11 11:39:07 GMT 2020
I am pleased to announce the publication of _Issue 13.1_ 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
We trust you will find this publication a valuable resource for research
about media, communication and society in the Arab World and the Middle
East.
*__*
*_JAMMR: 13.1-_*
Volume (13): Issue (1); April 2020.
*‘Our dream is simple: Peace, safe and freedom’: Regime-critical
activism and artistic expression by Syrians in Denmark and Sweden’*
*Author:* Josepha Ivanka (Joshka) Wessels
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/josepha-ivanka-joshka-wessels>
*Abstract:* This article seeks to understand mediatized dynamics of
regime-critical activism and cultural performances by Syrians in Europe.
The focus of this research is on the Öresund-region between Denmark and
Sweden. Sweden was the first country in Europe to give immediate
permanent residence to Syrian refugees. It initially received most of
the Syrian refugees in 2015. After the arrival of large groups of
Syrians at Malmö station in that year, a growing network of volunteers
responded to the influx of refugees. Syrians started to build
relationships with local activists and have since joined in organizing
publicly mediated events, creating a new landscape for creative
industries and performance arts in the region. Applying a protest
communication ecology approach, I use a wide definition of media which
includes the aesthetics of street demonstrations, performance arts and
music, mediated and communicated through digital online platforms. I
apply an adjusted concept of communitas, including digital media and
online communication as analytical concept to observe and describe not
only how communitas is re-formed between Syrian refugees after arrival
but also how it emerges between Syrians and local hosts.
*‘Arab resistance in the diaspora: Comparing the Saudi dissident and the
Egyptian whistleblower’*
*Authors:* Sahar Khamis <https://www.intellectbooks.com/sahar-khamis>
and Randall Fowler <https://www.intellectbooks.com/randall-fowler>
*Abstract:* While much research on Arab and Muslim diasporas in the West
focuses on the War(s) on Terror, in this article, we explore how two
particular diasporic groups, Egyptian and Saudi activists, work to shape
public perceptions of the authoritarian regimes in their countries of
origin. Contextualizing the efforts of these activists in the post-Arab
Spring political and mediated environments, we investigate how these
political exiles employ communication to disrupt, expose and resist the
resurgent authoritarianism taking root in their countries of origin.
Using a comparative framework, we analyse the discourse of two prominent
activists, Mohamed Ali and Omar Abdelaziz, to illustrate the larger
dynamics of online cyberactivism amongst these diasporic groups.
Critically, we argue, the differences in these two activists'
communicative practices demonstrate how ostensibly similar resistance
movements may lead to disparate political outcomes, as their calls for
change diverge when it comes to issues of reform versus revolution. In
doing so, we seek to complicate overly simplistic understandings of Arab
anti-authoritarian resistance taking place online in the post-Arab
Spring era.
*‘Silencing the voice of Bahrain? Regime-critical media and Bahrain’s
London diaspora’*
*Author:* Thomas Fibiger <https://www.intellectbooks.com/thomas-fibiger>
*Abstract:* This article discusses the role of a politically mobilized
diaspora in the media and politics of Bahrain. The political turmoil of
several decades has resulted in the exile of a sizeable community of
Bahrainis, and many key activists have settled in London. From here they
continue to work with a variety of political activities and a variety of
media to put pressure on both Gulf and European regimes. The article
traces the development of media forms, from a print newspaper formed out
of the diasporic experience, via a particular community-driven homepage
opened in Bahrain in 1998, whose creator fled to London after the 2011
'Arab Spring' uprising, to the diversity of the social media that now
dominates. In this regard, the role of digital surveillance, and
subsequent demobilization and increasing silence, are key to the discussion
*‘Discourse of Yemeni TV broadcasters and the dilemma of regime
criticism, 2015–19*’
*Authors:* Mohammed Almahfali
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/mohammed-almahfali>
*Abstract:* The discourse of the Yemeni TV broadcasters has undergone
major changes since the Arab Spring in 2011. Moreover, since the
outbreak of Civil War in 2015, this discourse has been diverse and has
become a clear reflection of the contexts in which it is produced. This
article analyses Yemeni media discourse by analysing the titles of news
reports published on YouTube by five Yemeni TV channels belonging to
five diversified discourses in terms of political, ideological, cultural
and social orientation. The article adopts discourse framing as a
methodological tool, with which we can address media discourse and thus
reveal its social, political and cultural contexts. The article
concludes that Yemeni TV broadcasters' discourse depends on a limited
number of keywords that have a cognitive and cultural balance in Yemeni
society, words originally taken from cultural, religious and social
backgrounds in the collective memory of Yemen. Knowing these keywords
can be employed in different dimensions. While it can contribute to
developing the recipient awareness, it can also help to raise the degree
of professionalism in media performance in Yemen, especially in the
stage of peace-building and post-war.
*‘Supportive, transformative and reverse effects of media on Tunisian
diaspora’s political identity’*
*Authors:* Mostafa Shehata <https://www.intellectbooks.com/mostafa-shehata>
*Abstract:* The Tunisian diaspora in Europe has gained significant
research interest due to the fundamental changes recently triggered by
the Tunisian Revolution with which the diaspora strongly interacted.
This article investigates the potential effects of media use on the
political identity of Tunisian diasporic communities in Europe, from a
sociopolitical communication perspective. Based on 45 interviews
conducted with Tunisians living in Denmark, Sweden and France, a special
focus has been set on the patterns of media use in relation to
components of political identity (homeland orientation, religion and
ideology), considering the combined influences of both country of origin
and country of residence. The analysis shows that media exerted
supportive effects on the diaspora's homeland orientations – a process
that likely depended on participants' previous connection with Tunisia.
The media also exerted short-term transformative effects on the
political ideology and a reverse effect on religious orientations – a
process that mainly depended on life in both country of origin and
country of residence. This article proposes that this Tunisian diaspora
is more likely to construct a hybrid identity, supported by media
channels that facilitate the adoption of sociopolitical principles
derived from both country of origin and country of residence.
*‘Ambiguous belonging: Media practices among Syrians in Denmark*’
*Author:* Zenia Yonus <https://www.intellectbooks.com/zenia-yonus>
*Abstract:* This article presents two prevailing media orientations
among Syrian migrants in Denmark. The purpose is to show how Syrians
relate to, and evaluate, mediated content, and how it relates to
political action. The orientations are dyadic, and represent both news
about the conflict in Syria, as well as Danish politics – migration
policies in particular. The first is the ambivalent-localizing
orientation that mirrors the twofold orientation towards both Danish and
Syrian political events; and the second is the informed-obliterate, in
which Syrians choose to drop out of media content about Syria due to
mental health issues, or fear for their families still in Syria. The
study shows how media practices among diasporic Syrians in Denmark are
multidimensional, and puts forward the complexities of identity
processes between here and there, between political activism and
demobilization, and between gratitude for being safe and never feeling
safe. The argument is that, these multi-local processes involve multiple
interdependent factors, diverse encounters, as well as a variety of
struggles in belonging. Syrians consequently lack agency as well as
social, media and political recognition.
*_Book Review: (by _*Mazhar Al-Zo’by
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/mazhar-al-zoby>*_)_*
*/‘Revolutionary Egypt in the Eyes of the Muslim Brotherhood: A Framing
Analysis of Ikhwanweb/ (*Mohammed el-Nawawy and Mohamad Hamas**Elmasry
(2018).
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