Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 220
Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-0-7425-3630-2 • Hardback • January 2006 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-0-7425-3631-9 • Paperback • January 2006 • $47.00 • (£36.00)
978-1-4616-4008-0 • eBook • January 2006 • $44.50 • (£35.00)
Anandam P. Kavoori is associate professor of telecommunications at the University of Georgia. Todd Fraley is assistant professor of communication at East Carolina University.
Part 1 Part 1: Orientations
Chapter 2 1 Televising the "War on Terrorism": The Myths of Morality
Chapter 3 2 Mediatizing the Global War on Terror: Television's Public Eye
Part 4 Part 2: Genres and Contexts
Chapter 5 3 Prime Time Terror: The Case of La Jetée and 12 Monkeys
Chapter 7 4 Mediated Terrorism in Comparative Perspective: Spanish Press Coverage of 9/11 vs. Coverage of Basque Terrorism
Chapter 8 5 National Politics of Belonging and Conflicting Masculinities: Race and the Representation of Recent Wars
Chapter 8 6 Terrorism and the Exploitation of New Media
Part 9 Part 3: Frames and Contexts
Chapter 10 8 Critical Media Theory, Democratic Communication, and Global Conflict
Chapter 11 9 Terrorism, Public Relations, and Propaganda
Chapter 12 10 September 11, Social Theory, and Democratic Politics
Chapter 13 11 International Communication after Terrorism: Towards a Postcolonial Dialectic
As terrible as terror is, our media coverage is at times almost as bad. Why is that? What can we do about it? To understand the world today, you need to know the role the media plays as it embeds itself in an unjust system of deception. We need this bold new reader to help us penetrate that story behind the story. It is essential.
— Danny Schechter, news dissector; executive editor of MediaChannel.org; director of WMD: Weapons of Mass Deception
The volume is a success. A revealing and culturally relevant reader that challenges the conservative—often inaccurate—perceptions that go unchallenged in mainstream U.S. news media. It will improve Americans' understanding of terrorism and should be read by the mythmakers themselves. Essential.
— Choice Reviews
The strength of this volume...[is] its ability to move beyond a description of communicative patterns in the war on terror to discussing its theoretical implications for international communications and politics.
— Sandhya Bhattacharya, Pennsylvania State University; Journal Of International Communication
...an excellent book....A number of features of the volume stand out....I recomment this book to students, teachers and members of the public interested in engaging with critical issues of media, its treatment of 'terrorism' in the 'war on terror,' and the potentialities of democratic politics in a media age.
— Fifth Estate Online:Internat. Journal Of Radical Mass Media
War has always been reported—on pots and pyramids, in papers and the 'pictures.' In contemporary times a range of high-tech media has been added. More interestingly, we are now standing on a century of communication and social theory that helps us make sense of media, war, and senseless violence. Media, Terrorism, and Theory adds to a growing collection of theoretical treatments of the post–9/11 world and media, drawing on important contributors to this area of inquiry. Comprising carefully selected chapters, it will find its way into many a university course.
— Naren Chitty, Macquarie University
—Explores issues surrounding television/new media and terrorism, terrorism as media event, war and media (i.e., Afghanistan and Iraq), mediated nationalism, and public responsibility and journalistic accountability.
—Integrates international perspectives from contributors around the world.
—Organized around themes of orientation, genres, and frames.