Arabic and Muslim people in Sydney's daily newspapers, before and after september 11

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dc.contributor.author Manning Peter en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2009-12-21T03:56:00Z
dc.date.available 2009-12-21T03:56:00Z
dc.date.issued 2003 en_US
dc.identifier 2003001342 en_US
dc.identifier.citation Manning Peter 2003, 'Arabic and Muslim people in Sydney's daily newspapers, before and after september 11', Griffith University, Queensland, vol. 109, pp. 50-70. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1329-878X en_US
dc.identifier.other C1 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10453/6054
dc.description.abstract This paper examines two years of articles/texts located around the concepts of 'Arab' and 'Muslim' within Svdney 's two major daily newspapers. It finds peak issues which concentrate reporting of these concepts and it focuses on language used by journalists and the meanings they carry within the texts chosen around those peak issues. It argues that a consistency of view can be found in three peak issues - the Palestine/Israel conflict. Lebanese rape trials and the arrival of asylum seekers - and that this view is an antipodean development of a Western way of seeing the Orient defined by Edward Said as 'orientalism '. en_US
dc.publisher Media International Australia en_US
dc.relation.isbasedon http://www.uq.edu.au/emsah/mia/issues/miacp109.html#abstracts en_US
dc.title Arabic and Muslim people in Sydney's daily newspapers, before and after september 11 en_US
dc.parent Media International Australia incorporating Culture and Policy en_US
dc.journal.volume 109 en_US
dc.journal.number en_US
dc.publocation Queensland, Australia en_US
dc.identifier.startpage 50 en_US
dc.identifier.endpage 70 en_US
dc.cauo.name Journalism en_US


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