Jihadi Culture on the World Wide Web
Material type: TextPublication details: New York Bloomsbury 2013.Description: 255 pISBN:- 9781501307676
- 363.32502854678 R2J4
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Ahmedabad | Non-fiction | 363.3250 2854678 R2J4 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 196420 |
Browsing Ahmedabad shelves, Collection: Non-fiction Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
363.325 0954792 R2F7 Fragile frontiers: the secret history of Mumbai terror attacks | 363.3250 2854678 R2J4 Jihadi Culture on the World Wide Web | 363.325 G3R4-1 The rise and fall of Al-Qaeda | 363.325 G3R4-2 The rise and fall of Al-Qaeda | 363.325 H6A5 The Al-Qaeda doctrine: the framing and evolution of the leadership's public discourse |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"This volume examines "jihadi" content on the Internet by drawing on both Arabic and English primary source materials. After examining this content as digital media, the work looks at how it is productively consumed by online communities, including how "jihadi" individuals construct themselves online and how jihadism is practiced and represented as an online activity. The work also discusses the consumption of such jihadi media by those who are hostile to radical Islam and the relation between fantasy, pleasure, ideology, and ordinary life.This unique survey features case studies, such as the cyberjihadi "Irhabi 007," pro-US and Israeli "patriots" who are often openly Islamophobic, and "Infovlad" --a forum that became the meeting place for radical Islamists and radical freelance "counter terrorists." This innovative approach to studying violent content on the Internet is a significant contribution to the literature that will appeal to anyone interested in political violence, terrorism, and political communication"--
"This volume examines "jihadi" content on the Internet by drawing on both Arabic and English primary source materials. After examining this content as digital media, the work looks at how it is productively consumed by online communities, including how "jihadi" individuals construct themselves online and how jihadism is practiced and represented as an online activity. The work also discusses the consumption of such jihadi media by those who are hostile to radical Islam and the relation between fantasy, pleasure, ideology, and ordinary life. This unique survey features case studies, such as the cyberjihadi "Irhabi 007," pro-US and Israeli "patriots" who are often openly Islamophobic, and "Infovlad" --a forum that became the meeting place for radical Islamists and radical freelance "counter terrorists." This innovative approach to studying violent content on the Internet is a significant contribution to the literature that will appeal to anyone interested in political violence, terrorism, and political communication"
https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/jihadi-culture-on-the-world-wide-web-9781441175625/
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