Proto-State Media Systems explores how decisions by contemporary violent extremist groups create, develop, and sustain media systems. Focusing on the cases of al-Qaeda and ISIS, this book showcases how standard media systems theory fails to fully explain the media systems of these organizations as a basis for building a revised theoretical lens that comprehends these emergent systems in the 21st century global media context.
Utilizing constitutive and online networking theories, Winkler and El Damanhoury explore how militant proto-states create lasting, adaptable, identity-based systems that work to attract and sustain the attention of followers. The groups' appeals to transhistorical and transpatial identity formations in their media products reveal new insights about community formation and how we analyze media systems in the proto-state context.
Recognizing that nation-states no longer exercise monopoly control over online and offline media systems, Proto-State Media Systems investigates how certain violent extremist groups bent on establishing sustained territorial and governing control over populations have revolutionized the media environment of the 21st century.
Author(s): Carol Winkler, Kareem El Damanhoury
Series: Causes and Consequences of Terrorism
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 287
City: New York
Cover
Proto-State Media Systems
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
1. The Challenge to State-Based Global Media Systems
2. Proto-State Media Systems: A History of Al-Qaeda and ISIS
3. Transhistorical Militancy, Community-Building, and Proto-State Media Systems
4. Transpatial Identity, Community-Building, and Proto-State Media Systems
5. Material Presence, Online Attention, and Proto-State Newsworthiness
6. Audience Resilience Strategies of Proto-State Media Systems
7. An Analytical Approach for Understanding Proto-State Media Systems
Afterword
Glossary
Appendix
Bibliography
Index