Egyptian activists and state supporting media: Unlikely media alliances in revolutionary times

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Egyptian activists and state supporting media : Unlikely media alliances in revolutionary times. / Mollerup, Nina Grønlykke.

2015. Abstract fra Theorising Media and Conflict, Vienna, Østrig.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Mollerup, NG 2015, 'Egyptian activists and state supporting media: Unlikely media alliances in revolutionary times', Theorising Media and Conflict, Vienna, Østrig, 23/10/2015 - 24/10/2015.

APA

Mollerup, N. G. (2015). Egyptian activists and state supporting media: Unlikely media alliances in revolutionary times. Abstract fra Theorising Media and Conflict, Vienna, Østrig.

Vancouver

Mollerup NG. Egyptian activists and state supporting media: Unlikely media alliances in revolutionary times. 2015. Abstract fra Theorising Media and Conflict, Vienna, Østrig.

Author

Mollerup, Nina Grønlykke. / Egyptian activists and state supporting media : Unlikely media alliances in revolutionary times. Abstract fra Theorising Media and Conflict, Vienna, Østrig.

Bibtex

@conference{f50a04e522664bdc8bba95cec96450de,
title = "Egyptian activists and state supporting media: Unlikely media alliances in revolutionary times",
abstract = "Mark Allen Peterson (2011) has argued for seeing revolutions as periods of liminality, maintaining that unlike traditional rites of passage, where the outcome of the process is known, the transformational possibilities in a social and political revolution seem endless. In this presentation, I argue that the uncertainties of the transformational possibilities encourage shifting and unlikely media alliances in which people, who would previously see themselves as fierce opponents momentarily find common objectives and cooperate around them. I look particularly at relationships between corporate journalists and activists from the No to Military Trials for Civilians campaign and Operation Anti Sexual Harassment and Assault (OpAntiSH) and describe their very different media dynamics. No to Military Trials for Civilians managed to get through to corporate media after months of insistent efforts and a substantial amount of lobbying and documentation around the issue of military trials. OpAntiSH activists, though dealing with the topic of mass sexual assaults, which had previously been actively ignored by corporate media, were aggressively pursued by corporate journalists. The presentation takes a point of departure in ethnographic fieldwork with information activists and corporate journalists in Egypt during two periods in 2012, when the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) was leading the country, and 2013, when Mohammed Morsy of the Muslim Brotherhood was president. During both these periods, the revolution was very much ongoing, but the political situations and relatedly the mediascapes in the country were significantly different. ",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Conflict, Media, Media anthropology",
author = "Mollerup, {Nina Gr{\o}nlykke}",
year = "2015",
month = oct,
day = "23",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 23-10-2015 Through 24-10-2015",
url = "https://johnpostill.com/2016/02/01/cfa-theorising-media-and-conflict/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Egyptian activists and state supporting media

AU - Mollerup, Nina Grønlykke

PY - 2015/10/23

Y1 - 2015/10/23

N2 - Mark Allen Peterson (2011) has argued for seeing revolutions as periods of liminality, maintaining that unlike traditional rites of passage, where the outcome of the process is known, the transformational possibilities in a social and political revolution seem endless. In this presentation, I argue that the uncertainties of the transformational possibilities encourage shifting and unlikely media alliances in which people, who would previously see themselves as fierce opponents momentarily find common objectives and cooperate around them. I look particularly at relationships between corporate journalists and activists from the No to Military Trials for Civilians campaign and Operation Anti Sexual Harassment and Assault (OpAntiSH) and describe their very different media dynamics. No to Military Trials for Civilians managed to get through to corporate media after months of insistent efforts and a substantial amount of lobbying and documentation around the issue of military trials. OpAntiSH activists, though dealing with the topic of mass sexual assaults, which had previously been actively ignored by corporate media, were aggressively pursued by corporate journalists. The presentation takes a point of departure in ethnographic fieldwork with information activists and corporate journalists in Egypt during two periods in 2012, when the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) was leading the country, and 2013, when Mohammed Morsy of the Muslim Brotherhood was president. During both these periods, the revolution was very much ongoing, but the political situations and relatedly the mediascapes in the country were significantly different.

AB - Mark Allen Peterson (2011) has argued for seeing revolutions as periods of liminality, maintaining that unlike traditional rites of passage, where the outcome of the process is known, the transformational possibilities in a social and political revolution seem endless. In this presentation, I argue that the uncertainties of the transformational possibilities encourage shifting and unlikely media alliances in which people, who would previously see themselves as fierce opponents momentarily find common objectives and cooperate around them. I look particularly at relationships between corporate journalists and activists from the No to Military Trials for Civilians campaign and Operation Anti Sexual Harassment and Assault (OpAntiSH) and describe their very different media dynamics. No to Military Trials for Civilians managed to get through to corporate media after months of insistent efforts and a substantial amount of lobbying and documentation around the issue of military trials. OpAntiSH activists, though dealing with the topic of mass sexual assaults, which had previously been actively ignored by corporate media, were aggressively pursued by corporate journalists. The presentation takes a point of departure in ethnographic fieldwork with information activists and corporate journalists in Egypt during two periods in 2012, when the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) was leading the country, and 2013, when Mohammed Morsy of the Muslim Brotherhood was president. During both these periods, the revolution was very much ongoing, but the political situations and relatedly the mediascapes in the country were significantly different.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Conflict

KW - Media

KW - Media anthropology

UR - http://www.media-anthropology.net/file/postill_media_conflict_vienna15.pdf

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 23 October 2015 through 24 October 2015

ER -

ID: 185232419