The Press in the Arab Middle East: A History

The Press in the Arab Middle East: A History

by Ami Ayalon
The Press in the Arab Middle East: A History

The Press in the Arab Middle East: A History

by Ami Ayalon

eBook

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Overview

Newspapers and the practice of journalism began in the Middle East in the nineteenth century and evolved during a period of accelerated sociopolitical and cultural change. Inspired by a foreign model, the Arab press developed in its own way, in terms of its political and social roles, cultural function, and the public image of those who engaged in it. Ami Ayalon draws on a broad array of primary sources--a century of Arabic newspapers, biographies and memoirs of Arab journalists and politicians, and archival material--as well as a large body of published studies, to portray the remarkable vitality of Arab journalism. He explores the press as a Middle Eastern institution during its formative century before World War II and the circumstances that shaped its growth, tracing its impact, in turn, on local historical developments. After treating the major phases in chronological sequence, he looks closely at more specific aspects: the relations between press and state; newspapers and their audience; the press and traditional cultural norms; economic aspects of the trade; and journalism as a new profession in Arab society.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195358575
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 03/23/1995
Series: Studies in Middle Eastern History
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 855 KB

About the Author

Tel Aviv University

Table of Contents

Abbreviationsix
Introduction3
IHistorical Phases
1.State Bulletins: Pronouncing the Official Truth11
"Egyptian Events,"13
The Official Ottoman Press20
2.Enthusiastic Beginnings: The Private Press, 1855-188228
The Private Press in Lebanon31
Egypt: The Focus Moves West39
Europe, the Convenient Refuge46
3.The Private Press, 1882-191850
Egypt, the Capital of Arab Journalism51
The Fertile Crescent and the Hejaz: Beginnings62
Wartime Exigencies69
4.The Arab States and the Press, 1918-194573
Egypt75
Syria and Lebanon82
Iraq91
Palestine95
The Journalistic Periphery: Transjordan and the Arabian Peninsula101
The End of an Era104
IIAspects of Development
5.Press, State, and the Question of Freedom109
State and Press: The Stick and the Carrot110
Journalists and Freedom126
6.The Reader138
Cultural Determinants138
Circulation145
Popular Exposure to the Press154
Press and Readership159
7.Cultural Legacy and the Challenge of the Press166
Printing and the Guardians of Old Values166
Newspapers and Traditional Literary Norms173
The Vocabulary of the Press182
8.The Economic Angle: The Press as Merchandise and as Enterprise190
The Press as Merchandise190
The Press as Enterprise: Starting Up195
Sources of Income: Advertising202
Sources of Income: Circulation206
Sources of Income: Subsidization211
9.The Craft of the Arab Journalist215
Lure and Frustration216
Toward Professionalism223
Kurd 'Ali, Yusuf, Musa, Istanbuli230
Conclusion243
Notes247
References275
Index289
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