Browsing by Person "Doğan, Taner"
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Item Al Jazeera: Far from perfect, but still a symbol of hope [News Article](Middle East Eye, 2017-08-06) Doğan, TanerItem Are we witnessing the (dis)appearance of intellectual wisdom through digital spaces?(L.S.E., 2024-11-29) Doğan, TanerItem Communicating Collective Memory: The Narrative Nexus of Stefan Zweig's Vienna and Edward Said's Jerusalem(IAMCR, 2024-06) Doğan, TanerItem Communicating Hagia Sophia as an Emotional Holy Space and Reshaping Collective Memory in a Populist Digital Age(University of Edinburgh, 2023-10) Doğan, TanerItem Communication Strategies in Turkey: Erdogan, the AKP and Political Messaging(I.B. Tauris, 2020-12-10) Doğan, TanerThe Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is known for his populist Islamist ideology, charismatic personality, and for ushering in new forms of communication strategies in Turkey. The key tools in Erdogan's political communication repertoire include religious, cultural and historic symbols and imagery. From engaging Israel to the Gezi Park protests, from the Arab uprisings to the July 2016 coup attempt, every key moment in Turkey's recent history has heralded a change in Erdogan's rhetoric. Communication Strategies in Turkey examines the transformation of political messaging that has taken place within the Justice and Development Party (AKP) under Erdogan. Using quantitative and qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews with high profile AKP officials, observations at AKP rallies and headquarters, and analysis of Erdogan's speeches from 2002 to 2019, the book shows how his method of communication changed over time to prioritise a “New Turkey” to replace Atatürk and his legacy.Item Covering ISIS in the British media: Exploring agenda-setting in The Guardian newspaper(Intellect, 2020-09-01) Doğan, Taner; Doğan, Sare Selvi OzturkSelf-proclaimed ‘Islamic State’ (ISIS) hit the news headlines across the globe in the post-Arab Uprisings period. Its main aim was to replace the ‘colonialist borders’ of the Middle East created with the Sykes–Picot agreement in 1916. One of the atrocities of this terror network was against a minority in Iraq, the Yazidis. Whereas other victims of ISIS, such as Alawites, Druze, Ismailis and Turkmen, have not been covered thoroughly in the British and US media, Yazidis – in particular Yazidi women – dominated the titles. Notwithstanding, the framing of the Yazidis has been influential in the engagement of the Obama administration against ISIS’ move in the Levant; the Kurdish minority is still under threat today because of their ethnic and religious identity. This article discusses how agenda-setting effects the news media’s power to shape individual attitudes and public opinion. The Guardian’s agenda-setting is discussed in this article as a credible, ‘most liberal’ and ‘most trusted’ news brand in the United Kingdom. A content analysis of news articles regarding the plight of Yazidi population in Iraq and its continuous coverage mostly focusing on Yazidi women was conducted, with the articles published at the time when the crisis broke out. The authors of this article apply the notions of an ‘East–West’ divide and ‘Othering’ to frame ISIS’ move in Mount Sinjar, Iraq. The study emphasizes that The Guardian not only set the agenda by prioritizing the circumstances of the Yazidi population, but also deployed frameworks of ‘orientalist’ depictions of Yazidi women as slaves of ISIS.Item Crisis of representation: Religion as an art of populist discourse [Oral Presentation](Universidade Católica Portuguesa, 2019-01-15) Doğan, TanerItem Cultural self-orientalism and its impact on Turkey’s communication: From Kemalism to Islamism – A theoretical discussion of the country’s two ‘isms'(Bloomsbury, 2025-06-26) Doğan, Taner; Matar, DinaItem The dialectics of media ownership and new digital communication habits in Turkey [Oral Presentation](IMMAA, 2019-10-04) Doğan, TanerItem Digital Islamism: How conservative Instagram influencers resist populist Islamist policies in Turkey(International Communication Association, 2023-05) Doğan, TanerItem Digital Middle East: State and Society in the Information Age [Book Review](SAGE, 2019-04-03) Doğan, TanerItem Digitalisation and Freedom(2023-10-07) Doğan, TanerNeoliberalism's growth has intensified the experience of digitization. This process broadens what is perceived as freedom yet paradoxically sets new perimeters for thought, funneling intellectual activity into established molds.Item Erdogan's 'New Turkey' narrative is no longer selling [News Article](Middle East Eye, 2020-09-19) Doğan, TanerItem From an Ottoman bank to a contemporary art institution: Salt, Turkey’s cultural space, as an opportunity for co-existence(Queen Margaret University, 2023-06) Doğan, TanerItem Islamism, Populism and the new Digital Media Ecosystem [Oral Presentation](MeCCSA, 2019-01-10) Doğan, TanerItem Lessons on a new kind of political communication to win the silent majority: US Elections 2016(Politics Today, 2016-12-13) Doğan, TanerThe rise of the far right has grown on the back of highly divisive, identity-based rhetoric. It emphasizes the growth of fear, anger, Islamophobic discourse and anti-migration policies. How this new wave will impact realpolitik going forward will be watched by many with great concern and unease. Yet it is clear that this new paradigm is a revolt against the postmodern period, which has been increasingly candidate-centered at the expense of any party or social movement.Item The Lion and the Nightingale: A Journey Through Modern Turkey – Kaya Genç [Book Review](Full Stop, 2020-12-10) Doğan, TanerItem A new language and communication(2023-05-07) Doğan, TanerItem Populism en-acted: Historical Turkish TV dramas as a tool of political communication [Oral Presentation](Moscow State University, 2019-10-17) Doğan, Taner; Köroglu, Elif