Photographic Warfare
ISIS, Egypt, and the Online Battle for Sinai
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Georgia Press
Published:15th Aug '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
How extremist groups weaponize digital photographs in their online war against the nation-state
Photographic Warfare explores the processes of visual contestation at work in the competing official media campaigns of state forces and militant, nonstate actors in the online environment.
Photographic Warfare explores the processes of visual contestation at work in the competing official media campaigns of state forces and militant, nonstate actors in the online environment. Islamist and far-right militant groups are increasingly weaponizing their visual media by displaying their actions—beheadings, trainings, fighting on the battlefield, services provision to locals, and so on— as spectacles that circulate around the globe to challenge statebased media messaging and policy agendas. In response, numerous states and coalitions have expanded their online media presence to counter such threats.
Using the conflict between ISIS and the Egyptian state over the Sinai Peninsula as a case study, Kareem El Damanhoury introduces an analytical framework of visual contestation to guide future studies of competing visual media campaigns in the online environment. The proposed model provides a rubric for dissecting and understanding contemporary photographic warfare using visual framing, semiotic analysis, contextual interpretations, and comparative applications. Photographic Warfare further emphasizes the many situational factors that influence visual output and content, including militant attacks, counterterrorism operations, loss of leaders, and introduction of new groups into the battlefield.
The topic is one of world significance, and Photographic Warfare provides a well-grounded analysis of the historical context in which it is situated.
* author of On the Discourse of Social ScienISBN: 9780820361628
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
220 pages