Al-Mayadeen: The Construction of an Enemy Image
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22032/dbt.44935Keywords:
al-Mayadeen, Arab media, Arab uprisings, enemy image, Othering, threat narrativeAbstract
This article investigates how threat narratives and enemy images were constructed at the pan-Arab news TV station, al-Mayadeen, during the station’s first year on air. I argue that the construction of an enemy image takes places as a fine interplay between threat narratives of existing political and ideological positions on the one hand, and current affairs on the other. Al-Mayadeen started broadcasting in 2012, counteracting both the new influential narratives of young activists calling for democracy, and the Sunni Islamist trend that followed; both groups became central elements in a process of ‘Othering’ at al-Mayadeen, dividing the Arab world into ‘good’ and ‘bad’. Al-Mayadeen relaunched the question of Palestine, while the well-known threat narrative of Israel was equally promoted although adjusted to ongoing political and military developments in the region. Integrating the rising new actor, the Islamic State, a renewed enemy image was constructed where Israel and the Islamic State came to constitute two faces of the same enemy.
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Copyright (c) 2020 Christine Crone
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.