This article examines the role of the internet in 2003 Iraq war from the perspective of the challenges it poses to the practices and formats of mainstream journalism and to the hegemonic articulations of war. Theoretically centralizing the concept of hegemony (as a network of interlocking but still distinct hegemonies), it positions blogs as alternative media by contrasting them to mainstream journalistic routines in situations of war and the tendency of mainstream media to essentialise the other/the enemy. Three very distinct cases are examined. First, the Iraqi blogger Salam Pax; second, the so-called mil-blogs and third the role of the internet in the distribution and archiving of the Abu Ghraib photographs. In each case, the discourses ...
Purpose- To offer greater insight in the role of blogs in the creation of a more transparent news me...
This blog post introduces the LSE research project ‘Pockets of Media Civicness’ in a Conflictual Pol...
While researchers and the popular press have been interested in understanding the blogs and blogging...
This article analyses the evolution of a war and terror blogosphere between 2001 and 2011. It identi...
The terrorist attacks of 9/11 made people look at the Web as a source of news and live accounts in a...
This article examines current events weblogs or blogs that were particularly active during the secon...
The terrorist attacks of 9/11 made people look at the Web as a source of news and live accounts in a...
This paper examines a particular form of online activity-weblogging, and how it has allowed for spec...
This paper examines a particular form of online activity-weblogging, and how it has allowed for spec...
This chapter proposes to examine the emergent forms and practices of blogging as an augmentation of...
In what ways does wartime citizen journalism—through its form, style and content—either oppose or ad...
This article explores the Internet as a resource for political information and communication in Marc...
On blogs and Web sites, by e-mail and video, the Iraq war is fought on the Internet Associated Press...
The 2003 Iraq War was the first military conflict in which online media played a significant role. T...
This dissertation provides a contribution to the criminology of war from the perspective of cultural...
Purpose- To offer greater insight in the role of blogs in the creation of a more transparent news me...
This blog post introduces the LSE research project ‘Pockets of Media Civicness’ in a Conflictual Pol...
While researchers and the popular press have been interested in understanding the blogs and blogging...
This article analyses the evolution of a war and terror blogosphere between 2001 and 2011. It identi...
The terrorist attacks of 9/11 made people look at the Web as a source of news and live accounts in a...
This article examines current events weblogs or blogs that were particularly active during the secon...
The terrorist attacks of 9/11 made people look at the Web as a source of news and live accounts in a...
This paper examines a particular form of online activity-weblogging, and how it has allowed for spec...
This paper examines a particular form of online activity-weblogging, and how it has allowed for spec...
This chapter proposes to examine the emergent forms and practices of blogging as an augmentation of...
In what ways does wartime citizen journalism—through its form, style and content—either oppose or ad...
This article explores the Internet as a resource for political information and communication in Marc...
On blogs and Web sites, by e-mail and video, the Iraq war is fought on the Internet Associated Press...
The 2003 Iraq War was the first military conflict in which online media played a significant role. T...
This dissertation provides a contribution to the criminology of war from the perspective of cultural...
Purpose- To offer greater insight in the role of blogs in the creation of a more transparent news me...
This blog post introduces the LSE research project ‘Pockets of Media Civicness’ in a Conflictual Pol...
While researchers and the popular press have been interested in understanding the blogs and blogging...