Adel Iskandar

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Adel Iskandar (aka Adel Iskandar Farag) (born 15 March 1977) is a British-born Middle East media scholar, postcolonial theorist, analyst, [1] and academic. He is currently an Associate Professor of Global Communication at Simon Fraser University in Canada. The author and co-author of several works on Arabic language media, Iskandar's work has contributed both to the political economy of communication and the cultural impact of media. His most prominent works deal with analyses of the Arabic satellite station Al Jazeera, [2] digital dissidence, global communication theory, and decolonization.

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Born to an Egyptian family of physicians in Edinburgh, Scotland, he grew up in Kuwait, escaping the Iraqi invasion and the 1991 Persian Gulf War. At the age of 16, he moved to Canada where he earned his degree in Social Anthropology and Biology from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He later earned a master's degree in Communications from Purdue University Calumet in Hammond, Indiana and a PhD from the University of Kentucky.

He proposes the concept of "contextual objectivity" as a critique of media's coverage of war. [3] He wrote a regular column for Egyptian independent newspaper Almasry Alyoum during and shortly after the revolution and taught in the Communication, Culture and Technology (CCT) program as well as the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies (CCAS) at Georgetown University. [4]

Iskandar is a co-editor of prominent e-zine Jadaliyya.

Works

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References

  1. Cock, Jorn de (9 July 2011). "Egyptenaren slaan rood alarm: Onvrede over militaire junta groeit". De Standaard . Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  2. Boehlert, Eric (12 November 2004). "Fallujah anticlimax". Salon.com . Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  3. el-Nawawy & Iskandar (Fall–Winter 2002). "The Minotaur of 'Contextual Objectivity': War coverage and the pursuit of accuracy with appeal". Transnational Broadcasting Journal. 9. Archived from the original on 11 February 2012.
  4. Timpane, John (28 February 2011). "Twitter and other services create cracks in Gadhafi's media fortress". The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved 16 July 2011.