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The representation of Islam is unquestionably a critical test for
comparing journalistic reporting across countries and cultures. The
Islamic religion has weight in international reporting (defining
what we termed "foreign Islam"), but it is also the religion of
numerically important minority groups residing in Europe ("national
Islam"). The first part of the book is "setting the scene." Three
chapters provide insights in dominant patterns of the
representation of Islam as detected by various authors and studies
involved with Islam representation in Europe. Part two, the core
section of the book, contributes to the development of the field of
comparative journalism studies by comparing several countries and
six media systems in Western Europe: the Dutch-speaking part of
Belgium (Flanders), the French-speaking part of Belgium (Wallonia),
the Netherlands, France, Germany, and the U.K. Part three of this
book presents two reception studies, one qualitative and the other
quantitative. Equally important, as the bulk of attention goes to
Western Europe, is the extension towards the representation of
Muslims and Islam outside Western Europe. Part four of the book is
devoted to the representation of Islam in some of the so-called
BRICs-countries: Russia, China, and India.
Es wird deutlich, dass das Scheitern des Sozialismus sowie die mit
seiner realen Auspragung stets eng verbundene Diktatur notwendige
Folgen der totalitaren wirtschaftspolitischen Leitbilder sind."
The representation of Islam is unquestionably a critical test for
comparing journalistic reporting across countries and cultures. The
Islamic religion has weight in international reporting (defining
what we termed "foreign Islam"), but it is also the religion of
numerically important minority groups residing in Europe ("national
Islam"). The first part of the book is "setting the scene." Three
chapters provide insights in dominant patterns of the
representation of Islam as detected by various authors and studies
involved with Islam representation in Europe. Part two, the core
section of the book, contributes to the development of the field of
comparative journalism studies by comparing several countries and
six media systems in Western Europe: the Dutch-speaking part of
Belgium (Flanders), the French-speaking part of Belgium (Wallonia),
the Netherlands, France, Germany, and the U.K. Part three of this
book presents two reception studies, one qualitative and the other
quantitative. Equally important, as the bulk of attention goes to
Western Europe, is the extension towards the representation of
Muslims and Islam outside Western Europe. Part four of the book is
devoted to the representation of Islam in some of the so-called
BRICs-countries: Russia, China, and India.
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