The Women of Islam: The role of journalistic photography in the (re)production of character-type

With the idea, as a starting point, that some images incite one to acts of contemplation, mediated by ambivalent meanings and sensations, this study proposes an interpretation of the photographs of Islamic women in the Brazilian press. Their condition as a fi gure present in the media is a concern, a...

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Main Author: Kati E. Caetano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Associação Brasileira de Pesquisadores em Jornalismo 2006-06-01
Series:Brazilian Journalism Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/article/view/71
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spelling doaj-5cf474f5849a46129b814310c15917bf2020-11-24T22:08:55ZengAssociação Brasileira de Pesquisadores em JornalismoBrazilian Journalism Research1808-40791981-98542006-06-012114115610.25200/BJR.v2n1.2006.7171The Women of Islam: The role of journalistic photography in the (re)production of character-typeKati E. Caetano0Universidade Tuiuti do ParanáWith the idea, as a starting point, that some images incite one to acts of contemplation, mediated by ambivalent meanings and sensations, this study proposes an interpretation of the photographs of Islamic women in the Brazilian press. Their condition as a fi gure present in the media is a concern, above all recurring in the contemporariness, in the places usually occupied by political content involving the confl icts between the East and West, and therefore on the whole and in the economy of the illustrative visual information of the fi rst page news or the World section. Thus, the Muslim woman’s image in several articles metaphorically appears as a source of evocation of a culture characterized by restrictions of behavior and values that seem strange to us, apparently personifi ed in the solitary and anonymous fi gure or in the ordered crowd of women covered by the black veil of furtive glances.https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/article/view/71Picturejournalismfemale representationvisual communicationdocumental image
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kati E. Caetano
spellingShingle Kati E. Caetano
The Women of Islam: The role of journalistic photography in the (re)production of character-type
Brazilian Journalism Research
Picture
journalism
female representation
visual communication
documental image
author_facet Kati E. Caetano
author_sort Kati E. Caetano
title The Women of Islam: The role of journalistic photography in the (re)production of character-type
title_short The Women of Islam: The role of journalistic photography in the (re)production of character-type
title_full The Women of Islam: The role of journalistic photography in the (re)production of character-type
title_fullStr The Women of Islam: The role of journalistic photography in the (re)production of character-type
title_full_unstemmed The Women of Islam: The role of journalistic photography in the (re)production of character-type
title_sort women of islam: the role of journalistic photography in the (re)production of character-type
publisher Associação Brasileira de Pesquisadores em Jornalismo
series Brazilian Journalism Research
issn 1808-4079
1981-9854
publishDate 2006-06-01
description With the idea, as a starting point, that some images incite one to acts of contemplation, mediated by ambivalent meanings and sensations, this study proposes an interpretation of the photographs of Islamic women in the Brazilian press. Their condition as a fi gure present in the media is a concern, above all recurring in the contemporariness, in the places usually occupied by political content involving the confl icts between the East and West, and therefore on the whole and in the economy of the illustrative visual information of the fi rst page news or the World section. Thus, the Muslim woman’s image in several articles metaphorically appears as a source of evocation of a culture characterized by restrictions of behavior and values that seem strange to us, apparently personifi ed in the solitary and anonymous fi gure or in the ordered crowd of women covered by the black veil of furtive glances.
topic Picture
journalism
female representation
visual communication
documental image
url https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/article/view/71
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