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This study is an attempt to analyze how the reaction to that Denmark's Jyllands-Posten newspaper published caricatures of the prophet Muhammad following September 30, 2005, which turned into a crisis between the West and East, particularly the Christian and Islamic Worlds, was interpreted and signified in the Turkish national press. Setting out fro...
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This article addresses the problem of preserving the memory of first-wave Russian emigrants who settled in France between the two world wars. The author is interested in the visual and audiovisual heritage of exiles, in particular, press caricatures and cinema, one of whose functions was to transmit not only c...
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Citations
This study investigates the extent to which newspapers are polarized in representing civil society organizations in Turkey. In examining the news in 15 printed newspapers and 2 online newspapers in 2017, we found that (1) 1499 associations and 499 foundations were mentioned but not equally distributed across the newspapers, (2) Turkish newspapers’ coverage of associations/foundations was affected by the type of association/foundation (religious/conservative vs. secular) and newspaper (pro-government vs. anti-government), (3) when news about an association/foundation appeared in pro-government newspapers, it did not appear in anti-government newspapers, and vice versa, and (4) secular associations/foundations were covered more often by anti-government newspapers than by pro-government newspapers. We therefore argue that in countries such as Turkey, where civil society organizations have historically been closely allied with state or political ideologies, newspapers’ political stances affect the media coverage of civil society organizations.
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This article is a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) of the discursive strategies employed by Mahathir Mohamed, former Prime Minister of Malaysia, in 10 of his speeches that express resistance and challenge to the former U.S. President, George W. Bush's military ideology of "war on terror" post September 11, 2001. The study is guided by CDA's focus on power relations and power struggle that are manifested in language. On speaking against terrorism, Mahathir's dislike for the Bush administration's handling of the issue is viewed as a platform to further his own ideology. The analysis reveals how Mahathir's arguments fall within the human rights rhetoric that calls on general norms, freedom, human rights, and justice, supported with biases towards the plight of Muslims and the Middle East. Mahathir's resistance to Bush reveals repetitive use of national rhetoric, self-glorification, comparison moves, and references to shared history and shared presuppositions, and his criticisms towards the "others" fall within the ideological construction of a positive self-presentation of himself as Prime Minister of Malaysia and a Muslim leader to be emulated.