ABSTRACT

This edited volume examines theoretical and empirical issues relating to violence and war and its implications for media, culture and society.

Over the last two decades there has been a proliferation of books, films and art on the subject of violence and war. However, this is the first volume that offers a varied analysis which has wider implications for several disciplines, thus providing the reader with a text that is both multi-faceted and accessible. This book introduces the current debates surrounding this topic through five particular lenses:

  • the historical involves an examination of historical patterns of the communication of violence and war through a variety sources
  • the cultural utilises the cultural studies perspective to engage with issues of violence, visibility and spectatorship
  • the sociological focuses on how terrorism, violence and war are remembered and negotiated in the public sphere
  • the political offers an exploration into the politics of assigning blame for war, the influence of psychology on media actors, and new media political communication issues in relation to the state and the media
  • the gender-studies perspective provides an analysis of violence and war from a gender studies viewpoint.

Violence and War in Culture and the Media will be of much interest to students of war and conflict studies, media and communications studies, sociology, security studies and political science.

part |52 pages

Through the historical lens

part |47 pages

Through the cultural lens

chapter |14 pages

The ethics of remembering

Little Big Man and the exoneration of American guilt

chapter |18 pages

Loving violence?

The ambiguities of SM imagery in contemporary popular culture

part |58 pages

Through the sociological lens

chapter |18 pages

Defining the victims of terrorism

Competing frames around victim compensation and commemoration post-9/11 New York City and 3/11 Madrid

chapter |17 pages

The returns of war

Bodies, images and invented ritual in the war on terror

chapter |21 pages

Frames, forums and Facebook

Interpreting British Muslim understandings of post-7/7 militarist media narratives

part |77 pages

Through the political lens

chapter |16 pages

Media actors in war and conflict

Insights from political psychology and the Bosnian war

chapter |17 pages

Virilio and the gaze of the state

Vision machines, new media and resistance

chapter |25 pages

Blame it on the Russians

Tracking the portrayal of Russian hackers during cyber conflict incidents 1

part |28 pages

Through the gender studies lens

chapter |11 pages

Making the pain count

Embodied politics in the new age of terror

chapter |15 pages

Corrective rapes

Rape narratives in South Africa