The Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack of January 7, 2015 shook French journalism to the core and reverberated around the world, triggering a cascade of responses from journalists, media outlets, cartoonists and caricaturists from diverse geographies of freedom of expression and journalistic cultures. This book is a multifaceted case study that describes and explains sameness and difference in diverse journalistic conceptualizations of the Charlie Hebdo affair from a comparative, international perspective. It explores how different journalistic traditions, cultures, worldviews and styles conceptualized and reacted to the clash between freedom of expression and respect for religious sentiments in the context of terrorism, where those sentiments are imposed on the media and secular societies through intimidation, coercion and violence. The book analyzes the political and cultural clashes between the core human right of freedom of expression, and rite of respect for religious sentiments, which is situated on the outer periphery of the human right of freedom of religion. It also examines how media outlets, editors, and cartoonists from different politico-cultural contexts and journalistic cultures in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and North and South America, addressed the delicate issue of Mohammed cartoons in general, and the problem of (re)publication of the controversial Charlie Hebdo Je Suis Charlie Mohammed cartoon, in particular.
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The Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack of January 7, 2015 shook French journalism to the core and reverberated around the world, triggering a cascade of responses from journalists, media outlets, cartoonists and caricaturists from diverse geographies of freedom of expression and journalistic cultures.
Les mer
Chapter 1. Introduction: The Charlie Hebdo Affair as a Global “Meta-Media Event”.- PART I: THEORETICAL AND HISTORICAL APPROACHES.- Chapter 2. Journalistic (Battle)fields, Cultures, Mentalities, and Proximities.- Chapter 3. Charlie Hebdo and French Collective Memory: Origins of the Right to Caricature.- Chapter 4. Genesis of The Charlie Hebdo Affair: The Clash of Human Rights and Religious Rite.- PART III: The Charlie Hebdo Affair: Case Studies in Journalism and Comparative Establismentalities.- Chapter 5. The Charlie Hebdo Affair, Freedom of Expression, and Apologia for Terrorism Under French Law.- Chapter 6. The Charlie Hebdo Terrorist Attack and European Journalistic Solidarity (With Lea Hellmueller).- Chapter 7: The Charlie Hebdo Affair in the Journalistic Field of the United Kingdom.- Chapter 8. The Charlie Hebdo Affair in Turkey: Balancing Human Rights & Religious Rites.- Chapter 9: The CharlieHebdo Affair and the Right to Take Offense: Religious Sensibilities versus Freedom of Expression in India.- Chapter 10: The Charlie Hebdo Affair in three African Journalistic Fields.- Chapter 11: The Charlie Hebdo Affair and Transnational Solidarity in three Latin American Journalistic Battle(fields).- Chapter 12. The Charlie Hebdo Affair in the American Journalistic Field.- Chapter 13. One Country, Two Journalistic Cultures: The Charlie Hebdo Affair in the Journalistic Field of Canada.- Chapter 14. Afterword and After Thoughts.
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The Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack of January 7, 2015 shook French journalism to the core and reverberated around the world, triggering a cascade of responses from journalists, media outlets, cartoonists and caricaturists from diverse geographies of freedom of expression and journalistic cultures. This book is a multifaceted case study that describes and explains sameness and difference in diverse journalistic conceptualizations of the Charlie Hebdo affair from a comparative, international perspective. It explores how different journalistic traditions, cultures, worldviews and styles conceptualized and reacted to the clash between freedom of expression and respect for religious sentiments in the context of terrorism, where those sentiments are imposed on the media and secular societies through intimidation, coercion and violence. The book analyzes the political and cultural clashes between the core human right of freedom of expression, and rite of respect for religious sentiments, which is situated on the outer periphery of the human right of freedom of religion. It also examines how media outlets, editors, and cartoonists from different politico-cultural contexts and journalistic cultures in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and North and South America, addressed the delicate issue of Mohammed cartoons in general, and the problem of (re)publication of the controversial Charlie Hebdo Je Suis Charlie Mohammed cartoon, in particular.
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Winner in the Multicultural Non-Fiction category in the 2020 International Book Awards (Los Angeles) Awarded Third Place President’s Faculty Book Award for 2020-2021 at Texas Tech University Uses communication theories as conceptual frameworks for analyzing satirical journalism and satire of religion in culture-specific journalistic paradigms, the problem of blasphemy, and the applicability of the human right of freedom of expression to culture-specific cartoons and caricatures in our globalized society Investigates how specific media outlets that operate in our interconnected system of global journalistic cultures justified their decisions to republish or not to republish Charlie Hebdo’s post terrorist attack edition that featured the Je Suis Charlie Mohammed cartoon cover
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783030180782
Publisert
2019-11-25
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Forfatter