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Reframing Political Communication and Media practices in the Middle East and North Africa: Towards decolonization

Contributors

Abstract

A decade on from the Arab uprisings, debates continue to reiterate exceptionalist discourses about the region and its peoples which tend to deny individual agency. They also neglect long collective histories of mediated political cultures that have emerged within colonial and post-colonial structures and outside peripheries of formal power and politics. This book problematizes the relationship between politics and communication in the Middle East and North Africa region, paying attention to the diversity of communicative forms and political practices outside formal institutions and structures while remaining conscious of the power dynamics within institutional practices. Examining political communication in Palestine, Lebanon, Egypt, Morocco, Iraq, Syria, Turkey,Tunisa and Iran, the book’s chapters challenge Western-centric theories and methodologies that dominate the broad field of political communication by reframing the discussions to include the politics of the marginal or the peripheral, the informal, and the grassroots.

Citation

Matar, D. (Ed.). (2025). Reframing Political Communication and Media practices in the Middle East and North Africa: Towards decolonization. Bloomsbury. https://doi.org/10.5040/9780755653850

Book Type Edited Book
Publication Date Apr 30, 2025
Deposit Date Jan 24, 2025
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Series Title Political Communication and Media Practices in the Middle East and North Africa
ISBN 9780755653812
DOI https://doi.org/10.5040/9780755653850