Islam in the British Broadsheets: The Impact of Orientalism on Representations of Islam in the British Press
From the late Ayatollah Khomeini's fatwa against Salman Rushdie, to the extremism of the Taliban and the mass murder of the September 11th attacks, the image of Islam as a violent and anti-Western faith has featured dominantly in the global mass media. In this book, Elzain Elgamri sets out to refute such generalisations.Taking into account the historically conditioned Orientalist discourses, in light of the polarized relationship between Islam and the West, and deconstructing what has actually been reported in the British quality press, he argues that what has actually been journalistically covered is an incomplete fragment of a much more complex situation.While acknowledging that these terrible acts were indeed committed in the name of Islam, and that they did involve bloody violence that claimed the lives of innocent civilians and caused much intimidation, he argues that these events have been represented by the media as an archetype of Islam, whereas in actual fact there is no single monolithic Islam and, consequently, no single monolithic Muslim community. The author concludes that contrary to what is frequently depicted, Islam and Muslim societies are not confined only to confrontation, violence, terrorism and antagonism towards everything Western, but rather are extremely diverse in their religious and political outlooks.
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Islam in the British Broadsheets: The Impact of Orientalism on Representations of Islam in the British Press
From the late Ayatollah Khomeini's fatwa against Salman Rushdie, to the extremism of the Taliban and the mass murder of the September 11th attacks, the image of Islam as a violent and anti-Western faith has featured dominantly in the global mass media. In this book, Elzain Elgamri sets out to refute such generalisations.Taking into account the historically conditioned Orientalist discourses, in light of the polarized relationship between Islam and the West, and deconstructing what has actually been reported in the British quality press, he argues that what has actually been journalistically covered is an incomplete fragment of a much more complex situation.While acknowledging that these terrible acts were indeed committed in the name of Islam, and that they did involve bloody violence that claimed the lives of innocent civilians and caused much intimidation, he argues that these events have been represented by the media as an archetype of Islam, whereas in actual fact there is no single monolithic Islam and, consequently, no single monolithic Muslim community. The author concludes that contrary to what is frequently depicted, Islam and Muslim societies are not confined only to confrontation, violence, terrorism and antagonism towards everything Western, but rather are extremely diverse in their religious and political outlooks.
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Islam in the British Broadsheets: The Impact of Orientalism on Representations of Islam in the British Press

Islam in the British Broadsheets: The Impact of Orientalism on Representations of Islam in the British Press

by Elzain Elgamri
Islam in the British Broadsheets: The Impact of Orientalism on Representations of Islam in the British Press

Islam in the British Broadsheets: The Impact of Orientalism on Representations of Islam in the British Press

by Elzain Elgamri

eBook

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Overview

From the late Ayatollah Khomeini's fatwa against Salman Rushdie, to the extremism of the Taliban and the mass murder of the September 11th attacks, the image of Islam as a violent and anti-Western faith has featured dominantly in the global mass media. In this book, Elzain Elgamri sets out to refute such generalisations.Taking into account the historically conditioned Orientalist discourses, in light of the polarized relationship between Islam and the West, and deconstructing what has actually been reported in the British quality press, he argues that what has actually been journalistically covered is an incomplete fragment of a much more complex situation.While acknowledging that these terrible acts were indeed committed in the name of Islam, and that they did involve bloody violence that claimed the lives of innocent civilians and caused much intimidation, he argues that these events have been represented by the media as an archetype of Islam, whereas in actual fact there is no single monolithic Islam and, consequently, no single monolithic Muslim community. The author concludes that contrary to what is frequently depicted, Islam and Muslim societies are not confined only to confrontation, violence, terrorism and antagonism towards everything Western, but rather are extremely diverse in their religious and political outlooks.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780863725302
Publisher: Garnet Publishing (UK) Ltd
Publication date: 09/01/2008
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 244
File size: 561 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

Table of Contents

Introduction vii

Background xv

Part 1

1 Islam and the Christian West: historical background 3

2 Islam and Islamic fundamentalism in Western discourses 39

Part 2

3 Analysing discourse: theoretical and methodological issues 65

4 The Rushdie affair 101

5 The rise of the Taliban movement to power 155

6 The Luxor massacre of foreign tourists 171

7 The September 11th attacks 181

Part 3

8 Findings and conclusion 213

Bibliography 231

Index 235

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