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El. knyga: Conflicted: Making News from Global War

  • Formatas: 330 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Jul-2024
  • Leidėjas: Stanford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781503639454
  • Formatas: 330 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Jul-2024
  • Leidėjas: Stanford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781503639454

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"How is popular knowledge of war shaped by the stories we consume, what are the boundaries of this knowledge, and how are these boundaries policed or contested by journalists producing knowledge from war zones? Based on years of fieldwork in Iraq, Syria,and Lebanon, as well as Afghanistan and Ukraine, Conflicted challenges normative conceptions of war by revealing how representational authority comes to be. Turning the lens on journalists from The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, and other prominent publications, Isaac Blacksin shows why news coverage of contemporary conflict, widely presumed to function as a critique of excessive violence, instead serves to sanction official rationales for war. Blacksin argues that journalism's humanitarian frame - now hegemonic in conflict coverage - serves to depoliticize and re-moralize war, transforming it from an effect of policy on populations to an effect of violence on the innocent. Exploring the tension between experience and expression in conditions of violence, and tracking how journalists respond to dominant expectations of reality, Conflicted tells the story of war, reporters, and the consequences of their convergence. As new wars, and new reportage, continue to shape our understanding of armed conflict, this book makes visible both the power and the particularity of war reportage"--

How is popular knowledge of war shaped by the stories we consume, what are the boundaries of this knowledge, and how are these boundaries policed or contested by journalists producing knowledge from war zones? Based on years of fieldwork in Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon, as well as Afghanistan and Ukraine, Conflicted challenges normative conceptions of war by revealing how representational authority comes to be. Turning the lens on journalists from The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, and other prominent publications, Isaac Blacksin shows why news coverage of contemporary conflict, widely presumed to function as a critique of excessive violence, instead serves to sanction official rationales for war.

Blacksin argues that journalism's humanitarian frame—now hegemonic in conflict coverage—serves to depoliticize and re-moralize war, transforming it from an effect of policy on populations to an effect of violence on the innocent. Exploring the tension between experience and expression in conditions of violence, and tracking how journalists respond to dominant expectations of reality, Conflicted tells the story of war, reporters, and the consequences of their convergence. As new wars, and new reportage, continue to shape our understanding of armed conflict, this book makes visible both the power and the particularity of war reportage.

Recenzijos

"Blacksin's clear interpretive voice plies journalism's unconscious, bringing to the fore the fear and trauma that is excised from reporting. Conflicted is a truly extraordinary bookwritten with aplomb, thoroughly researched, and thoughtful through and through. A landmark text in the literature on the mediation of war." Alex Fattal, author of Guerrilla Marketing: Counterinsurgency and Capitalism in Colombia "We live in an age of war and depend for our war stories on the men and women who serve as our witnesses. War reporters are a legendary breed whose vital work has gone largely unexamineduntil now. Conflicted is quite simply the most thorough, intelligent, and unflinching examination of conflict reporting ever attempted. Isaac Blacksin has been there and his provocative account made me nod in recognition, grin in appreciation, and shout in outrage. For those transfixed by warand determined to learn how we really know what we think we know about itthis book is essential reading." Mark Danner, author of Stripping Bare the Body: Politics Violence War and Spiral: Trapped in the Forever War "A thoughtful work that draws on extensive ethnographic fieldwork and psychoanalysis, Conflicted does not make for light reading. It does, however, provide a corrective to a practice like drone warfare and the seemingly easy acceptance of civilian casualties resulting from 'the Global War on Terrorism.' It also calls into question the 'bearing witness' of journalistic professions.... Recommended."R. C. Cottrell, CHOICE "Conflicted offers a compelling critique of war journalism that challenges conventional narratives and advocates for a more detailed and critical approach to conflict reporting.... This book is essential for anyone interested in the intersection of media, war, and society."Mahedi Hasan, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly "Conflicted: Making News from Global War constitutes a major intervention for critical scholarship, in my view, and as such is essential reading not only for those concerned with war reportage but also for anyone endeavoring to rethink familiar presumptions about journalistic form, practice, and epistemology."Stuart Allan, International Journal of Press/Politics

Preface
Introduction: War's Lobby: The Displacements of Journalism in Wartime
Interlude: Cheapening Experience
Part I: The Language of War Reportage and Its Conditions
1. Folklore of the Future: The Certainty of Journalistic Expression
2. Visible System and Invisible Rules: Commodifying Common Sense
Interlude: Available Stories
Part II: The Meaning of War Reportage and Its Exclusions
3. Extermination as Protection: Depoliticizing War, Remoralizing Violence
4. Power Speaking to Truth: Struggles with the Problem of War
Interlude: What to Make of It
Part III: The Practice of War Reportage and Its Contradictions
5. Writing Conflicts: The Tension Between Experience and Expression
6. Agitation at the Margins: Return of the Journalistically Repressed
Interlude: Leaving Mosul
Conclusion: War's Exit: Entangled Possibility in the Age of Endless Conflict
Epilogue: From Mosul to Mariupol
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Isaac Blacksin is an ethnographer and Assistant Professor of Critical Media Studies in the Department of Communication and Journalism at Texas A&M University.