‘When language skews narratives’
The ISIS-led attacks on Paris, Beirut, and Baghdad in November 2015 were covered in a variety of ways by major news outlets globally. Coverage of the Paris attack was widespread, and layered with personal stories about those personally affected and analysis about the effects of terrorism on the Fren...
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doaj-e39e0ba587164936be0ccb4cb16a51ed2021-04-22T08:41:00ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryMedicine Anthropology Theory2405-691X2017-04-014210.17157/mat.4.2.4094729‘When language skews narratives’Ashish PremkumarKareem RaadThe ISIS-led attacks on Paris, Beirut, and Baghdad in November 2015 were covered in a variety of ways by major news outlets globally. Coverage of the Paris attack was widespread, and layered with personal stories about those personally affected and analysis about the effects of terrorism on the French way of life. By comparison, little coverage was given to either the Beirut or Baghdad events, the experiences of those suffering on the ground, or the wider issue of the effects of terrorism within Lebanese and Iraqi communities. In this think piece, the bombings in Beirut are used as a lens for examining the politics and consequences of mediated silence or ‘forgetting’ of violence and suffering in the Middle East. We employ a critical humanitarianism, rooted in a social medicine analysis, to connect these media trends to the training of health professionals. Our approach helps build accountability for the inequalities present in the Western construction of suffering and the emotive aspects of global violence, and promotes a wider conversation about the long-term biomedical effects of violence.http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4729beirutisisstructural violencehumanitarianismmass mediasocial media |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ashish Premkumar Kareem Raad |
spellingShingle |
Ashish Premkumar Kareem Raad ‘When language skews narratives’ Medicine Anthropology Theory beirut isis structural violence humanitarianism mass media social media |
author_facet |
Ashish Premkumar Kareem Raad |
author_sort |
Ashish Premkumar |
title |
‘When language skews narratives’ |
title_short |
‘When language skews narratives’ |
title_full |
‘When language skews narratives’ |
title_fullStr |
‘When language skews narratives’ |
title_full_unstemmed |
‘When language skews narratives’ |
title_sort |
‘when language skews narratives’ |
publisher |
University of Edinburgh Library |
series |
Medicine Anthropology Theory |
issn |
2405-691X |
publishDate |
2017-04-01 |
description |
The ISIS-led attacks on Paris, Beirut, and Baghdad in November 2015 were covered in a variety of ways by major news outlets globally. Coverage of the Paris attack was widespread, and layered with personal stories about those personally affected and analysis about the effects of terrorism on the French way of life. By comparison, little coverage was given to either the Beirut or Baghdad events, the experiences of those suffering on the ground, or the wider issue of the effects of terrorism within Lebanese and Iraqi communities. In this think piece, the bombings in Beirut are used as a lens for examining the politics and consequences of mediated silence or ‘forgetting’ of violence and suffering in the Middle East. We employ a critical humanitarianism, rooted in a social medicine analysis, to connect these media trends to the training of health professionals. Our approach helps build accountability for the inequalities present in the Western construction of suffering and the emotive aspects of global violence, and promotes a wider conversation about the long-term biomedical effects of violence. |
topic |
beirut isis structural violence humanitarianism mass media social media |
url |
http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4729 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ashishpremkumar whenlanguageskewsnarratives AT kareemraad whenlanguageskewsnarratives |
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1721514835141722112 |