© 2005 SAGE PublicationsThis article examines the creative labour of a group of Afghan radio soap opera writers scripting a popular social realist BBC World Service radio drama for broadcast in Afghanistan. Analysis centres on struggles over the political representation of the Taliban within the soap opera between 1996-8, a period in which they dominated politically and militarily. A tension is revealed in analysis between the individual political beliefs of writers and the simultaneous need to ‘realistically’ represent Afghan social and political lives. Production accommodations resulted in the active portrayal of a nostalgic and traditional vision of Afghanistan. It is suggested that these representations ultimately denied a conservative ...
Bearing in mind the big role media plays in shaping public opinion and the importance of understandi...
This article explores how a conflict which rages for the last forty years in Afghanistan, who is a n...
The following discussion is based on an extensive survey of UK mainstream television news reports br...
This article examines the politics of radio production and consumption in the context of a BBC World...
© 2002 SAGE PublicationsThis article examines the sociohistorical role of radio broadcasting in Afgh...
This essay analyses the role of audience research as a change agent in media development interventio...
© 2002 SAGE PublicationsThis article explores some of the semantic linkages that exist between the p...
The Taliban regime in Afghanistan helped create an image of Afghan women existing simply behind the ...
This paper traces the history of BBC World Service (BBCWS) broadcasts to Afghanistan and the politic...
Panellists have been challenged to consider how the research advances their thinking around the use ...
Local conflict zone interpreters occupy a precarious position between warring parties. They are ofte...
This article analyses the contents of three newspapers affiliated with the Tajik-dominated Jamiat an...
Narrative offers an evocative opportunity to understand the power of knowledge manipulation within t...
The international community entered Afghanistan in December 2001 to oust the Taliban. It promised re...
This article contains a commentary on a new public policy announced by the Taliban movement in Afgha...
Bearing in mind the big role media plays in shaping public opinion and the importance of understandi...
This article explores how a conflict which rages for the last forty years in Afghanistan, who is a n...
The following discussion is based on an extensive survey of UK mainstream television news reports br...
This article examines the politics of radio production and consumption in the context of a BBC World...
© 2002 SAGE PublicationsThis article examines the sociohistorical role of radio broadcasting in Afgh...
This essay analyses the role of audience research as a change agent in media development interventio...
© 2002 SAGE PublicationsThis article explores some of the semantic linkages that exist between the p...
The Taliban regime in Afghanistan helped create an image of Afghan women existing simply behind the ...
This paper traces the history of BBC World Service (BBCWS) broadcasts to Afghanistan and the politic...
Panellists have been challenged to consider how the research advances their thinking around the use ...
Local conflict zone interpreters occupy a precarious position between warring parties. They are ofte...
This article analyses the contents of three newspapers affiliated with the Tajik-dominated Jamiat an...
Narrative offers an evocative opportunity to understand the power of knowledge manipulation within t...
The international community entered Afghanistan in December 2001 to oust the Taliban. It promised re...
This article contains a commentary on a new public policy announced by the Taliban movement in Afgha...
Bearing in mind the big role media plays in shaping public opinion and the importance of understandi...
This article explores how a conflict which rages for the last forty years in Afghanistan, who is a n...
The following discussion is based on an extensive survey of UK mainstream television news reports br...