The image of islam in US print media discourse: The New York Times

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The image of islam in US print media discourse: The New York Times

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dc.contributor.advisor إسماعيل كرواد
dc.contributor.author ACIM RACHID
dc.description.collaborator فاطمة مؤيد
dc.description.collaborator إسماعيل كرواد
dc.description.collaborator محمد لروز
dc.description.collaborator خالد شاوش
dc.description.collaborator الشرقي قرقابة ؛
dc.date.accessioned 2023-10-26T10:42:53Z
dc.date.available 2023-10-26T10:42:53Z
dc.date.issued 2014
dc.identifier.uri http://toubkal.imist.ma/handle/123456789/25369
dc.description.abstract This research is divided into two major parts: The first is theoretical and the second is empirical. In the first place, we have attempted to provide a theoretical background by examining the different notions of discourse analysis such as discourse, text, ideology, pragmatics and so on. We have also traced up the evolution of the newspaper and put into focus its basic constituents like News, Editorials and Op-Eds. Media studies, along with rhetoric have also been addressed, with the intention of probing into how the media influence the public opinion. Being the subject of the study, the New York Times (and henceforth NYT) is introduced with all its basic components. Issues of bias and objectivity are questioned from the very beginning to show how hard or troublesome an experience might be to judge or even assess the paper ideological line. After that, the research focuses on stereotyping Islam and the rise of Orientalism. This latter theory is about the way the West has created the myth of the Orient in its discourse, the intentional or un-intentional tendency to otheri-ze or exoticize some minority groups like Muslims and Arabs. Next, the research points to the contribution made by Shaheen (2001) with his treatise Reel Bad Arabs. In the meantime, it examines the roots of the problem between the world of Islam and the Judeo-Christian West. The theoretical part concludes with an overview on the earlier research done on the image of Islam in the print media discourse.
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines, Béni Mellal - Doctorat ou Doctorat National fr_FR
dc.subject discourse analysis fr_FR
dc.subject newspaper fr_FR
dc.subject media influence fr_FR
dc.subject New York Times fr_FR
dc.subject bias fr_FR
dc.subject objectivity fr_FR
dc.subject Orientalism fr_FR
dc.subject stereotyping fr_FR
dc.subject minority groups fr_FR
dc.subject image of Islam fr_FR
dc.subject.other الإنجليزية
dc.title The image of islam in US print media discourse: The New York Times fr_FR

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