Article
Details
Citation
Saade B (2020) Islamic State and Game of Thrones: The Global Among Tradition, Identity, and the Politics of Spectacle. International Journal of Communication, 14, pp. 1911-1932. https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/9864
Abstract
The gruesome videos circulated on most media platforms by the organization that calls itself the Islamic State (IS) have prompted a heated debate about the ¡°Islamicity¡± of the organization that centered on how serious IS actors were regarding getting their ¡°interpretations¡± right. If any act of interpretation or of understanding of ¡°religion¡± has been transformed by the various technological and ideological developments of the last two centuries, I will argue here that Salafi thinking (of which IS articulations are but one aspect), understanding of a mythical past, and imagining of history outside a ¡°lived¡± tradition, marries itself conveniently with the way the latest audiovisual technology manifests itself to an audience, especially in consecrating a culture of speed and ¡°eventual¡± rupture. This relationship leads to a ¡°collapse of meaning¡± while leaving room for an overflow of ¡°graphicness.¡± The article will draw parallels between these practices and those of recent TV shows such as Game of Thrones, especially in reimagining a ¡°medieval era¡± that serves as a schema for addressing contemporary concerns.
Keywords
IS; GoT; media; modernity; medievalism; graphicness; simulation; real
Journal
International Journal of Communication: Volume 14
| Status | Published |
|---|---|
| Publication date | 31/12/2020 |
| Publication date online | 30/04/2020 |
| Date accepted by journal | 01/04/2020 |
| URL | |
| Publisher URL | |
| eISSN | 1932-8036 |
People (1)
Lecturer in Religion & Politics, Religion