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      The Reluctant Islamophobes: Multimedia Dissensus in the Hollywood Premodern

      European journal of American studies
      OpenEdition

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          Intermediality, Intertextuality, and Remediation: A Literary Perspective on Intermediality

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            Media Borders, Multimodality and Intermediality

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              Neo-Orientalism and the Neo-Imperialism Thesis: Post-9/11 US and Arab World Relationship

              Post-9/11 American neo-Orientalist representations pervade today's politics and journalism about the Arab World. Since the first emergence of the Middle East representation in American writings of the nineteenth century, one can assume that nothing has changed in representations of the Middle East in the US. This article explores a twenty-first century phenomenon called “neo-Orientalism,” a style of representation that, while indebted to classical Orientalism, focuses on “othering” the Arab world with the exclusion of some geographic parts, such as India and Turkey, from the classical map of Orientalism. Although neo-Orientalism represents a shift in the selection of its subject and locale, it nonetheless reproduces certain repetitions of and conceptual continuities with its precursor. Like classical Orientalism, neo-Orientalism is a monolithic discourse based on binarism between the superior American values and the inferior Arab culture.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                European journal of American studies
                ejas
                OpenEdition
                1991-9336
                September 22 2020
                September 22 2020
                : 15
                : 3
                Article
                10.4000/ejas.16256
                85bf13f1-9f69-4823-af84-198edb69946b
                © 2020
                History

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