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Call for Papers

"Muslim Media and the 'War on Terror'"
Interdisciplinary Conference
Department of Politics, University of Bristol
Bristol (UK)
6-7 July 2006

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Although there has been considerable research, particularly since September
11, on media representations of terrorism, the war on terror, anti-terrorist
security policy, Islam, and so on, these analyses overwhelmingly focus on
the mainstream Western press. In this workshop, and the edited book to issue
from it, we shift attention explicitly to the analysis of Muslim media and
their representations.

Papers are welcome on a wide range of topics relating to Muslim media and
the 'war on terror'. We are particularly interested in studies of Muslim
media in the diaspora - in Europe, the United States, and elsewhere - but
papers on media in 'Muslim countries' (those with Muslim traditions in both
the Arab and non-Arab worlds) or papers comparing Muslim and non-Muslim
media are also very welcome. Papers can focus on single countries, or make
comparisons between and among countries. We also encourage authors to
consider diverse forms of media - printed, televised, online - or to
compare and contrast among them.

We hope that these papers will engender a wide-ranging discussion of the
role of Muslim media of all kinds in generating discourses about, and/or
attitudes among Muslims towards (among other things)
- The contemporary war on terrorism
- Its attendant anti-terrorist security policies
- The nature of Muslim-non-Muslim relations
- The status of Islam, in the countries of diaspora or in the Muslim
world
- The relation of Islam to 'the West' or to terrorism
- The implications of these representations for diverse Muslim
communities

Central questions that might be asked include:
- How do Muslim media, in the Muslim world or in the diaspora,
represent the terrorism, the war on terrorism, anti-terrorist security
policies, and so on?
- Do Muslim media in the diaspora represent these differently than
media from within the Muslim world?
- How do Muslim media within the diaspora differ among themselves,
across states or across different media?
- What effect do the representations in diverse Muslim media have on
the communities in which they are read or viewed?

Authors are encouraged also to be critical of the concepts deployed in
this call for papers, including the notion of 'Muslim media' and the 
'Muslim world' itself.

The workshop will take place at the University of Bristol, Department of
Politics, on 6-7 July 2006. 

Please submit abstracts to Jutta Weldes ([email protected]) and
Gennaro Gervasio ([email protected]) by April 15 (or as soon as
possible). For more information, also please contact Jutta Weldes or Gennaro
Gervasio.

This workshop is sponsored by the ESRC New Security Challenges Programme
grant RES-223-25-0056.



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