A cursory look at Indian prime-time news tells us much about the tone and tenor of the people associated with it. Exaggerations, hyperbole, and tempers run wild, and news anchors flail in theatrical rage. News channels and news editors display their ideological affiliations subliminally. These affiliations—a factor of personal political stances, funding bodies, and investors—lead to partisan bias in the framing of news and, in some cases, can easily translate into racial prejudice. In this paper, I examine news coverage related to Muslims in India. I study the coverage of two issues specifically—love jihad and triple talaq—in prime-time English news of two channels: Times Now and Republic TV. Love jihad is a term used to describe alleged ca...
The 140 million Muslims in India receive very little media attention. The resulting lack of knowledg...
The most important roles of the media are agenda-setting and representation. The media, particularly...
Drawing on Mahmood Mamdani’s analysis of the ‘good Muslim-bad Muslim’ dichotomy within American poli...
A cursory look at Indian prime-time news tells us much about the tone and tenor of the people associ...
The images of race, caste, community and religion as perceived by the media have long been of intere...
A case study of a protest campaign against the Ahmadiyya community in Punjab and its coverage in Urd...
The news media comprise a key venue for anti-Muslim sentiment, sometimes called Islamophobia. Schola...
The most important roles of the media are agenda-setting and representation. The media, particularly...
In postcolonial India, narratives about Muslim women have revolved around tropes, such as tin talaq ...
In the last few decades, the Western media has waged a war against the identity to victims of the fo...
Since 9/11, Muslims in the west have been repeatedly exposed to questions from various quarters abou...
Media representations have significant power to shape opinions and influence public response to comm...
This article employs Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) on a sample from British tabloid newspapers t...
This paper discusses the coverage of Islam and Muslims in the New York Times (NYT) in the wake of th...
During the last two decades, the world witnessed a meteoric rise in the role played by the media for...
The 140 million Muslims in India receive very little media attention. The resulting lack of knowledg...
The most important roles of the media are agenda-setting and representation. The media, particularly...
Drawing on Mahmood Mamdani’s analysis of the ‘good Muslim-bad Muslim’ dichotomy within American poli...
A cursory look at Indian prime-time news tells us much about the tone and tenor of the people associ...
The images of race, caste, community and religion as perceived by the media have long been of intere...
A case study of a protest campaign against the Ahmadiyya community in Punjab and its coverage in Urd...
The news media comprise a key venue for anti-Muslim sentiment, sometimes called Islamophobia. Schola...
The most important roles of the media are agenda-setting and representation. The media, particularly...
In postcolonial India, narratives about Muslim women have revolved around tropes, such as tin talaq ...
In the last few decades, the Western media has waged a war against the identity to victims of the fo...
Since 9/11, Muslims in the west have been repeatedly exposed to questions from various quarters abou...
Media representations have significant power to shape opinions and influence public response to comm...
This article employs Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) on a sample from British tabloid newspapers t...
This paper discusses the coverage of Islam and Muslims in the New York Times (NYT) in the wake of th...
During the last two decades, the world witnessed a meteoric rise in the role played by the media for...
The 140 million Muslims in India receive very little media attention. The resulting lack of knowledg...
The most important roles of the media are agenda-setting and representation. The media, particularly...
Drawing on Mahmood Mamdani’s analysis of the ‘good Muslim-bad Muslim’ dichotomy within American poli...