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Islam in British media discourses

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This book describes how non Muslims use the news to inform themselves about Islam and Muslims. It does so by exploring how media institutions function in society and how its practices affect the pr...
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  • 07 May 2020
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Media reporting on Islam and Muslims commonly relate stories about terrorism, violence, or the lack of integration with western values and society. Yet there is little research into how non-Muslims engage with and are affected by these news reports. Inspired by the overtly negative coverage of Islam and Muslims by the mainstream press and the increase in Islamophobia across Europe, this book explores the influence of these depictions on the thoughts and actions of non-Muslims.

Building on extensive fieldwork interviews and focus groups, Laurens de Rooij argues that individuals negotiate media reports to fit their existing outlook on Islam and Muslims. Non-Muslim responses to these reports, de Rooij argues, are not only (re)productions of local and personal contextuality, but are co-dependent and co-productive to the reports themselves.

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Price: £85.00
Pages: 232
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 07 May 2020
ISBN: 9781526135223
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

RELIGION / Religion, Politics & State, Religion and politics, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, RELIGION / Islam / General, Sociology, Media studies: journalism

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Laurens de Rooij is a Lecturer of Islamic Studies at the University of Chester

Introduction
1 Modes of production: British media as a discursive system
2 Symbolic representations of Islam and Muslims
3 A dialectic of media theory and audience praxis
4 Examining the influence of current media portrayals of Islam and Muslims
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index