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E-raamat: Media and Past Conflict in Europe: Dynamics of Mediation and Power

Edited by (University of Greifswald, Germany), Edited by (University College Dublin, Ireland), Edited by (University of Agder, Norway)
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Focusing on how the history of past conflicts is mediated in the present and recent past in six European countries, this book explores media processes as they intersect with power dynamics and hegemonic narratives of history and historical memory.

The analysis centres around six countries which have experienced past conflict and traumatic past histories – Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cyprus, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Kosovo – selected based on the type of conflict (emanating from WWII, authoritarian past, colonial past, interethnic conflict, communist past) and its ongoing relevance. Focusing on the mediation of past conflict, the book revolves around the following questions: how do countries that have gone through historical trauma mediate this troubled past? How do they navigate processes of production, representation and reception? How do journalists negotiate the competing demands of professional values, political tensions and the emotional fallout of conflict and trauma? How do audiences/publics engage with contents that may misrepresent their community or experiences? How do representations of past conflict change over time? How are the mediations of the past involved in present day politics?

Setting out in each chapter the implications of their analysis for journalistic education and practice, the book will attract readers among academics in the area of media and conflict, and media and memory; to students of media, communications and journalism; and to journalists who write on past conflict and commemoration, as well as those writing and researching on the six countries that form the case studies.



This book explores media processes as they intersect with power dynamics and hegemonic narratives of history and historical memory. It will appeal to media and conflict, media and memory; communications, and journalism.

1. Mediation of Memories of Past Conflict

2. Dealing with Troubled History: How Journalists in History Newsbeat
Reconstruct the Past in Media Productions Today

3. Journalism and War Heritage: Representation of the Past in Post-War
Bosnia-Herzegovina

4. Regimes of Historicity of the Cyprus Conflict in Media Discourses

5. Remembering the Horror: National Socialism and the Holocaust in the
Discourse of Germanys Leading News Magazine Der Spiegel

6. The Missing Link: Assessing the Role of the Greek News Media in Shaping
and Orienting Collective Memory and Discussion on the Greek Civil War

7. Media Conflict Memory in Ireland: Dislocation, Fracture, and a Public Path
Forward

8. Epilogue

Index
Eugenia Siapera is Professor of Digital Technology Policy and Society at University College Dublin, Ireland.

Anke Fiedler is a researcher and lecturer at the University of Greifswald, Germany.

Kenneth Andresen is Professor of Media Studies at the University of Agder, Norway.