Publics, Politics and Participation
Hadj-Moussa 279 ohen and Arato maintain that the inclusion of the family in C discourse on civil society is fundamental. However ...
280 Mediated Publics to make this apparent breach of custom palatable. These arrangements between the gendered parties at times ...
Hadj-Moussa 281 everal authors have discussed the adjustments required of the fam-S ily that are provoked by national and satell ...
282 Mediated Publics What’s its merit? Nothing. Women like it because there is fash- ion news and Egyptian movies. There are abo ...
Hadj-Moussa 283 form of documentaries and game shows—that operate through the French language. All things considered, satellite ...
284 Mediated Publics discourse. The practices of satellite television viewing thus enter into a serial relationship with practic ...
Hadj-Moussa 285 as they are replaced by television. In particular, she notes that he “for- gets that this older form of entertai ...
286 Mediated Publics is also highly valued, especially since television is for all practical pur- poses the only cultural space ...
Hadj-Moussa 287 history that viewers seek diversion. They long to turn away from that his- tory because it neither represents “t ...
288 Mediated Publics thought of through “an extroverted notion of identity of place.”^48 The pro- cesses of identification are a ...
Hadj-Moussa 289 (Fatiha, 28 years old). This mirror function not only operates at the level of comparisons between France and Al ...
290 Mediated Publics creates in the national public space by linking this space with other secu- lar public spaces. To watch sat ...
Hadj-Moussa 291 of ‘urban.’”^60 Satellite television favors the production of knowledge other than the hegemonic distillations o ...
292 Mediated Publics Notes 1.“monumental history,” see Fethi Benslama, “La cause identitaire,” On Intersignes 10 (1995). “Specif ...
Hadj-Moussa 293 10.hilippe Lucas, “Après la citoyenneté les multi-citoyennetés,” P Cahiers inter- nationaux de Sociologie LXXIX ...
294 Mediated Publics (and still is). Satellite television did not require viewers to be literate. This explains the success of s ...
Hadj-Moussa 295 paysages de rencontre, Paris, CNRS (1998): 177–185; Mostefaoui, La télévi- sion française; Madani, “Modalités et ...
296 Mediated Publics the Prism of the Local, edited by Daniel Miller (London and New York: Routledge, 1995); Purnima Mankekar, S ...
Hadj-Moussa 297 50.e Kabyle crisis began in April 2001 following public celebrations of the Th “Berber Spring” of 1980, when the ...
298 Mediated Publics 61.“relay components,” see Querrien, “Un art des centres et des banlieues.” On 62.illes Kraemer, “Presses f ...
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