Document detail

The media in Lebanon: fragmentation and conflict in the Middle East

London et al.: Tauris (2019), xiii, 222 pp., bibliogr. p.199-208, index
ISBN 978-1-78076-541-9 (hbk); 978-1-78831-801-3 (online); 978-1-78673-657-4 (pdf)
"Lebanese society is famously, and even notoriously, fragmented, along both class and sectarian lines. Here, Nabil Dajani looks at how this societal division impacts on the nature of the mass media in Lebanon. Implementing the wider theory that the structure and content of mass media is unique to the society within which it operates, he looks at how Lebanese media have often helped to sustain the sectarian divisions within Lebanese society. Dealing with newspapers, radio and television as well as new and emerging forms of communication, such as the internet, social media websites and blogs, he examines how the media both reflect societal realties as well as the ways they influence social consciousness. Beginning with an analysis of the socio-political context of modern-day Lebanon, Dajani critically examines the historical and current realities of the media in this country." (Publisher)
Contents
1 Background, 1
2 The Print Media: Unceasing Challenges, 15
3 Radio Broadcasting, 59
4 Television, 81
5 From Folk to Social Media, 111
6 Conclusion, 127
Appendix 1 Setting the Limits of Political Publications: Legislative Decree No. 74 of April 13 (1953), 147
Appendix 2 Licensed Lebanese Political Publications, 148
Appendix 3 List of Radio Stations, 152
Appendix 4 The 1994 Audio-Visual Law: Law Number 382, 157
Appendix 5 Amendments of the 1962 Publications Law, 171