This study analyses British and Turkish media conceptualizations of the Charlie Hebdo affair. Editorial decisions to republish or not to republish the Mohammed cartoon cover reflected the politico-cultural pressures on the journalistic fields in both countries. The controversy demonstrated that the editorial autonomy of the British media outlets enabled them to engage in ‘eclectic neutrality’, the right to decide to republish or not to republish the cartoons. Despite the severely constrained journalistic environment of Turkey, where expectations of respect for religion take precedence over freedom of expression, the Turkish media engaged in symbolic acts of resistance in furtherance of freedom of expression
A Research Report submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johanne...
This article offers an inquiry into the discursive construction of ‘terrorism’ by France 24, the Fre...
The thesis seeks to analyse media discourse of four print media in Great Britain and in France in th...
In the aftermath of the attack on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, there was a remarkabl...
© 2019 NOND of AEJMC. This study explores how British and American newspapers covered the 2015 terro...
The right to freedom of expression is a qualified right: it allows expression that might ‘offend, sh...
The spreading of explicit beheading videos of western journalists by Islamic State shocked the news ...
The paper discusses controversies on freedom of expression and the arts, focusing on Islam and Musli...
The attack on Charlie Hebdo was widely spread throughout the world. It caused the reactions of poli...
January 7, 2015, the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, which among other things has published satiri...
The terror attack on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in January 2015 serves to explore t...
The Charlie Hebdo affair has brought to the fore four major issues: [1] Freedom of expression and of...
This paper explores the concept of freedom of speech, as it relates to religion, focusing on recent...
This thesis looks at the French satirical magazines Charlie Hebdo and its predecessor Hara Kiri to e...
The forms and flows of global media coverage of the Charlie Hebdo assassinations of January 2015 com...
A Research Report submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johanne...
This article offers an inquiry into the discursive construction of ‘terrorism’ by France 24, the Fre...
The thesis seeks to analyse media discourse of four print media in Great Britain and in France in th...
In the aftermath of the attack on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, there was a remarkabl...
© 2019 NOND of AEJMC. This study explores how British and American newspapers covered the 2015 terro...
The right to freedom of expression is a qualified right: it allows expression that might ‘offend, sh...
The spreading of explicit beheading videos of western journalists by Islamic State shocked the news ...
The paper discusses controversies on freedom of expression and the arts, focusing on Islam and Musli...
The attack on Charlie Hebdo was widely spread throughout the world. It caused the reactions of poli...
January 7, 2015, the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, which among other things has published satiri...
The terror attack on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in January 2015 serves to explore t...
The Charlie Hebdo affair has brought to the fore four major issues: [1] Freedom of expression and of...
This paper explores the concept of freedom of speech, as it relates to religion, focusing on recent...
This thesis looks at the French satirical magazines Charlie Hebdo and its predecessor Hara Kiri to e...
The forms and flows of global media coverage of the Charlie Hebdo assassinations of January 2015 com...
A Research Report submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johanne...
This article offers an inquiry into the discursive construction of ‘terrorism’ by France 24, the Fre...
The thesis seeks to analyse media discourse of four print media in Great Britain and in France in th...