New Media and Revolution: Resistance and Dissent in Pre-uprising Syria by Billie Jeanne Brownlee (review)

IF 0.2 3区 艺术学 0 FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION Canadian Journal of Film Studies-Revue Canadienne d Etudes Cinematographiques Pub Date : 2022-04-01 DOI:10.3138/cjfs-2021-0061
Viviane Saglier
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Abstract

While the Arab world—often grasped through the non-neutral geopolitical categorization of the Middle East—has been widely under-represented in the field of film and media studies, it tends to acquire greater visibility in times of crisis or political upheaval. Following the Arab uprisings in the early 2010s, a surge in scholarship contributed to solidifying the emerging field of Arab film and media studies. Malu Halasa, Zaher Omareen, and Nawara Mahfoud’s edited collection Syria Speaks (2014), Marwan M. Kraidy’s The Naked Blogger of Cairo (2016), Donatella Della Ratta’s Shooting a Revolution (2018), Alisa Lebow’s digital project Filming Revolution (2018), Kay Dickinson’s Arab Film and Video Manifestos (2018), and Della Ratta, Dickinson, and Sune Haugbolle’s edited collection The Arab Archive (2020) have all brilliantly examined how Arab media histories and cultures and their entanglements with revolutions raise questions about the politics of media. Billie Jeanne Brownlee’s New Media and Revolution: Resistance and Dissent in Pre-uprising Syria (2020) takes part in this conversation from a perspective that is distinct in two regards: first, by combining insights from political science and media studies; second, by looking at the prehistory of new media during the decade that preceded Syria’s revolution-turned-proxy war rather than the uprisings per se. If we critically examine New Media and Revolution’s two main contributions together, it can help us understand the benefits and limitations of transdisciplinary studies while reasserting the necessity of an approach to film and media studies that is in-depth and politically engaged. Against the techno-determinist narrative that dominated in the early years of the uprisings, Brownlee reasserts that new media, understood capaciously as satellite TV, blogs, news websites, Facebook, and YouTube, functioned as a means rather than a cause of upheaval. By implementing a shift in the periodization of the Syrian revolution, the book examines the “infra-politics” of media practices and the emergence of a “contentious culture” since 2000 (9). The regime’s transition from Hafez al-Assad to his son Bashar in 2000 led to a contradictory media landscape. New policies were implemented to privatize new media infrastructures (especially the Internet and satellite TV), which were 10.3138/cjfs-2021-0061
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新媒体与革命:起义前叙利亚的抵抗与异议作者:比莉·珍妮·布朗利
虽然阿拉伯世界——通常通过中东非中立的地缘政治分类来理解——在电影和媒体研究领域的代表性普遍不足,但在危机或政治动荡时期,它往往会获得更大的知名度。在2010年代初的阿拉伯起义之后,奖学金的激增有助于巩固阿拉伯电影和媒体研究这一新兴领域。Malu Halasa, Zaher Omareen和Nawara Mahfoud的编辑集《叙利亚说话》(2014),Marwan M. Kraidy的《开罗的裸体博主》(2016),Donatella Della Ratta的《拍摄革命》(2018),Alisa Lebow的数字项目《拍摄革命》(2018),Kay Dickinson的《阿拉伯电影和视频宣言》(2018),以及Della Ratta, Dickinson,苏恩·豪伯勒编辑的文集《阿拉伯档案》(2020)都出色地研究了阿拉伯媒体的历史和文化,以及它们与革命的纠缠如何引发了关于媒体政治的问题。比莉·珍妮·布朗利的新媒体与革命:反抗和异议在起义前叙利亚(2020)从两个方面不同的角度参加这次对话:首先,通过结合政治学和媒体研究的见解;第二,研究新媒体在叙利亚由革命演变为代理战争(而非起义本身)之前的10年里的历史。如果我们批判性地审视新媒体和革命的两个主要贡献,它可以帮助我们理解跨学科研究的好处和局限性,同时重申一种深入和政治参与的电影和媒体研究方法的必要性。与在起义早期占主导地位的技术决定论的叙述相反,布朗利重申,新媒体(广泛地理解为卫星电视、博客、新闻网站、Facebook和YouTube)的作用是一种手段,而不是动乱的原因。通过对叙利亚革命时期的转变,本书考察了媒体实践的“政治下”以及自2000年以来“争议文化”的出现(9)。2000年政权从哈菲兹·阿萨德(Hafez al-Assad)过渡到他的儿子巴沙尔(Bashar),导致了矛盾的媒体格局。实施新媒体基础设施(特别是互联网和卫星电视)私有化的新政策,这是10.3138/cjfs-2021-0061
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