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Historical Narratives in Islamic State Propaganda / AYMENN AL-TAMIMI

Swansea University Author: AYMENN AL-TAMIMI

  • E-Thesis – open access under embargo until: 16th April 2029

DOI (Published version): 10.23889/SUthesis.66298

Abstract

Drawing on a large set of official Arabic-language publications of the Islamic State, this thesis provides an in-depth examination of historical narratives in Islamic State propaganda that spans the period 2014-October 2019 (i.e. the tenure of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as the group’s first caliph). The t...

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Published: Swansea, Wales, UK 2024
Institution: Swansea University
Degree level: Doctoral
Degree name: Ph.D
Supervisor: Reed, Alastair ; Macdonald, Stuart ; Glazzard, Andrew
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa66298
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first_indexed 2024-05-03T14:58:42Z
last_indexed 2024-05-03T14:58:42Z
id cronfa66298
recordtype RisThesis
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spelling v2 66298 2024-05-03 Historical Narratives in Islamic State Propaganda e3e4e02eda4d7aab4bd023b9db7a40cf AYMENN AL-TAMIMI AYMENN AL-TAMIMI true false 2024-05-03 Drawing on a large set of official Arabic-language publications of the Islamic State, this thesis provides an in-depth examination of historical narratives in Islamic State propaganda that spans the period 2014-October 2019 (i.e. the tenure of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as the group’s first caliph). The thesis argues that a set of themes emerge from the historical narratives deployed: namely, the in-group/out-group and crisis/solution dichotomies, steadfastness, ineligible in-group critique and historical legitimacy. These themes form the building blocks of a simple system of meaning for the group’s members and supporters, and without historical narratives these themes would make little sense. The themes are repeated seemingly ad nauseam, likely as part of a strategy to ensure that the group is staying ‘on message,’ and they are dovetailed by a theory of history that is ‘strongly’ and ‘weakly’ deterministic in nature, reinforcing the system of meaning. Moreover, this thesis finds that in constructing historical narratives, the group makes use of source materials that would generally be considered ‘authentic’ and ‘reliable’ in the realm of culture in which the group operates. E-Thesis Swansea, Wales, UK 16 4 2024 2024-04-16 10.23889/SUthesis.66298 COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University Reed, Alastair ; Macdonald, Stuart ; Glazzard, Andrew Doctoral Ph.D PGR Sures PGR Sures 2024-05-03T16:19:22.1163138 2024-05-03T15:50:21.0549875 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law AYMENN AL-TAMIMI 1 Under embargo Under embargo 2024-05-03T16:06:50.2814276 Output 2384255 application/pdf E-Thesis – open access true 2029-04-16T00:00:00.0000000 Copyright: The Author, Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi, 2024. true eng
title Historical Narratives in Islamic State Propaganda
spellingShingle Historical Narratives in Islamic State Propaganda
AYMENN AL-TAMIMI
title_short Historical Narratives in Islamic State Propaganda
title_full Historical Narratives in Islamic State Propaganda
title_fullStr Historical Narratives in Islamic State Propaganda
title_full_unstemmed Historical Narratives in Islamic State Propaganda
title_sort Historical Narratives in Islamic State Propaganda
author_id_str_mv e3e4e02eda4d7aab4bd023b9db7a40cf
author_id_fullname_str_mv e3e4e02eda4d7aab4bd023b9db7a40cf_***_AYMENN AL-TAMIMI
author AYMENN AL-TAMIMI
author2 AYMENN AL-TAMIMI
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publishDate 2024
institution Swansea University
doi_str_mv 10.23889/SUthesis.66298
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law
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description Drawing on a large set of official Arabic-language publications of the Islamic State, this thesis provides an in-depth examination of historical narratives in Islamic State propaganda that spans the period 2014-October 2019 (i.e. the tenure of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as the group’s first caliph). The thesis argues that a set of themes emerge from the historical narratives deployed: namely, the in-group/out-group and crisis/solution dichotomies, steadfastness, ineligible in-group critique and historical legitimacy. These themes form the building blocks of a simple system of meaning for the group’s members and supporters, and without historical narratives these themes would make little sense. The themes are repeated seemingly ad nauseam, likely as part of a strategy to ensure that the group is staying ‘on message,’ and they are dovetailed by a theory of history that is ‘strongly’ and ‘weakly’ deterministic in nature, reinforcing the system of meaning. Moreover, this thesis finds that in constructing historical narratives, the group makes use of source materials that would generally be considered ‘authentic’ and ‘reliable’ in the realm of culture in which the group operates.
published_date 2024-04-16T16:19:22Z
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score 11.012723