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In a knee-jerk of anti-terrorist fervour, the French Government seems to want religion to be totally private, walled in.
Conventional journalism portrays war as a zero sum game, a series of violent exchanges between contending parties. ‘War reporting’ requires clear winners and losers, and the media interprets the events contributing to conflict accordingly.
Anthony Ham recalls the people and place of Arg-è Bam.
Xenophobia lives on in Australian society. In this edition of Eureka Street we focus on the representation of indigenous Australians, Muslims, and Chinese immigrants.
Journalists may be fully aware of the issues that affect our multicultural society and may even be sympathetic to the Muslim community. But such efforts take place within the framework of media competition and an unrelenting drive for more readers and a greater market share.
Beth Doherty reviews Safiya Hussaini Tungar Tudu’s I, Safiya.
Despite some gains, no one can really question that, as a group, women have been and still are discriminated against by the mere fact of being women.
Anthony Ham wonders whether Spain can still be considered a Catholic country after all.
Reviews of the books In Tasmania; Women and media: International perspectives; Havoc, in its third year and The Tomb in Seville.
Dorothy Horsfield speaks to some articulate and revolutionary Islamic women
Anthony Ham travels the enigmatic and affluent Saudi Arabia
Traces of Rome have become part of the scenery.
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