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Queer Christian Responses to A Jihad for Love : The Case of SwedenYelkenci, Nilay January 2012 (has links)
This reception study, drawing on Robert White’s culturalist approach to religious media and Jane Mansbridge’s oppositional consciousness, explores the meaning-making process of Queer Christians in Sweden about Parvez Sharma’s A Jihad for Love. The study argues that against a background where Muslims and Queer Muslims facing multiple forms of othering in Western mainstream media, queer-affirming Muslim alternative media can be a precursor to interfaith encounter and interreligious dialogue between Queer Christians and Queer Muslims. The results show that A Jihad for Love potentially increased the imagination and political interest of Queer Christians in Sweden in Queer Muslim lives. Finally, this study contributes to the reception of queer-affirming Muslim alternative media which has long been neglected and offers interesting insights about Queer Christian conceptualization of freedom, tolerance, secularism, religion and media in Swedish society. Keywords: A Jihad for Love, religious media, queer affirming alternative Muslim media, Queer Muslims, Queer Christians, Sweden, interfaith dialogue, secularism
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Contradictions in the Arab media : the case of ArabsatKarimi Alavi, Mahmoud January 2001 (has links)
In the construction of their media infrastructure, most of the Arab countries are spending millions of dollars on US and Western contracts. Regarded as one of the fastest growing and dynamic markets for media technologies in the world, the region may lack a clear media policy as a guideline to shed light upon the mega million investments on the industry. Some critics suggest that the advanced media technologies provided to the Arab world are mostly initiated by Western sales/marketing strategy rather than Middle Eastern choice and initiative. They see the process as a reaction to the Western media practices, rather than a pre-planned policy. This study is directed toward constructing a critical understanding of the development, and current status, of media policy and infrastructure in the Arab world. Being undertaken as the basis of a Ph. D. thesis in an inter-disciplinary department, the research is informed by a strong inter-disciplinary perspective, but with a clear political economy emphasis. The study seeks to examine whether there is a clear media policy in the Arab world, either at a national or regional level. Within this context, ARABSAT, perhaps the most popular media system in the Arab world, constitutes a specific case study. Inaugurated in 1985, the system has been the subject of extensive debate, sometimes heatedly discussing its pros and cons. Its long period of operation, the extensive contribution of most Arab/Muslim countries in the process of the creation and operation of ARABSAT, as well as the footprint coverage of the system including the Middle East, most parts of Asia, the Indian subcontinent and some parts of Europe, make the contribution of ARABSAT within the Middle East media environment of particular interest. Now, nearly 15 years after the advent of ARABSAT, established and supported by the overwhelming majority of the Arab states, a critical assessment of the system in terms of policy/strategy is timely.
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Contradictions in the Arab media: The case of ArabsatKarimi Alavi, Mahmoud January 2001 (has links)
In the construction of their media infrastructure, most of the Arab countries are spending millions of
dollars on US and Western contracts. Regarded as one of the fastest growing and dynamic markets
for media technologies in the world, the region may lack a clear media policy as a guideline to shed
light upon the mega million investments on the industry. Some critics suggest that the advanced
media technologies provided to the Arab world are mostly initiated by Western sales/marketing
strategy rather than Middle Eastern choice and initiative. They see the process as a reaction to the
Western media practices, rather than a pre-planned policy. This study is directed toward constructing
a critical understanding of the development, and current status, of media policy and infrastructure in
the Arab world. Being undertaken as the basis of a Ph. D. thesis in an inter-disciplinary department,
the research is informed by a strong inter-disciplinary perspective, but with a clear political economy
emphasis. The study seeks to examine whether there is a clear media policy in the Arab world, either
at a national or regional level. Within this context, ARABSAT, perhaps the most popular media
system in the Arab world, constitutes a specific case study. Inaugurated in 1985, the system has
been the subject of extensive debate, sometimes heatedly discussing its pros and cons. Its long period
of operation, the extensive contribution of most Arab/Muslim countries in the process of the creation
and operation of ARABSAT, as well as the footprint coverage of the system including the Middle
East, most parts of Asia, the Indian subcontinent and some parts of Europe, make the contribution of
ARABSAT within the Middle East media environment of particular interest. Now, nearly 15 years
after the advent of ARABSAT, established and supported by the overwhelming majority of the Arab
states, a critical assessment of the system in terms of policy/strategy is timely.
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