Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Médias et islamismes

Colloque

Vendredi 21 novembre 2008 | Beyrouth (Liban)

Beirut Media Forum 2008 : médias et islamismes

Institut français du Proche-Orient (Ifpo), Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Orient Institute Beirut

Résumé

Ce colloque se propose de réfléchir sur les modes de représentation médiatique de l’islam politique à partir d’études de cas emblématiques (Palestine, Yémen, Soudan, Iran, Liban…) en explorant les facteurs qui président à leur construction et circulation. Il s’intéressera ensuite aux nouveaux lieux de communication politique islamistes – les i-médias – en s’interrogeant sur les formes de mobilisation et de réception qu’ils suscitent aux niveaux local, national et transnational.

Annonce
À partir du milieu des années 1980, l’irruption spectaculaire de mouvements se réclamant de l’islam comme principe de légitimation ou comme objectif politique retiendra l’attention grandissante des spécialistes du Moyen Orient.

Le rôle joué par des acteurs islamistes dans les principaux conflits qui secouent le monde arabe n’a fait que renforcer cet intérêt.

Une abondante littérature, plus ou moins savante, a ainsi vu le jour traitant de questions relatives aux conditions de genèse du phénomène, à ses références idéologiques… L’islamisme a ainsi été abordé sous l’angle de la contestation politique, de la stratégie identitaire. Différentes analyses ont été proposées pour appréhender ses fondements sociaux, saisir ses répertoires de mobilisation et analyser ses stratégies politiques.

Néanmoins, rares demeurent les études qui se sont intéressées à sa représentation dans la sphère publique et en particulier médiatique. Qui plus est, malgré sa richesse et sa grande visibilité, la scène médiatique islamiste qui a su tirer profit des nouvelles technologies de l’information, reste très peu explorée.

C’est pourquoi, les organisateurs du Beirut Media Forum ont décidé de consacrer sa cession 2008 au thème du traitement médiatique de l’islamisme. Notre colloque se propose d’abord de réfléchir sur les modes de représentation médiatique de l’islam politique à partir d’études de cas emblématiques (Palestine, Yémen, Soudan, Iran, Liban…) en explorant les facteurs qui président à leur construction et circulation.

Il s’intéressera ensuite aux nouveaux lieux de communication politique islamistes – les i-médias - en s’interrogeant sur les formes de mobilisation et de réception qu’ils suscitent aux niveaux local, national et transnational.

A l’instar des éditions précédentes, BMF 2008 favorisera une approche qui confronte les discours académiques institués aux expériences pratiques de professionnels des médias. Seront ainsi conviés à intervenir des chercheurs européens et arabes travaillant sur le Moyen Orient ainsi que des journalistes ayant couvert cette région du monde.


Programme

9h : Discours d’ouverture
Samir Farah (FES), Franck Mermier (Ifpo), Stefan Leder (OIB)

9h15-10h : Présentation du séminaire
Olfa Lamloum (Ifpo)

10h-11h30 : Atelier 1 : De la construction des crises

Président de séance : Melhem Chaoul, sociologue, Université Libanaise

- Samy Dorlian, doctorant, Institut d’Etudes politiques, Aix-en-Provence
De la « Jeunesse Croyante » aux « huthistes » : le traitement médiatique de la guerre de Saada au Yémen

- Salima Mellah, journaliste, France
Regard croisé algéro-français sur la seconde guerre en Algérie

- Fabrice Weissman, directeur d’études, Médecins sans Frontières, Paris
Le Darfour, avant-poste de « la lutte contre l’islamo-fascisme » ?

12h-13h30 : Atelier 2 : L’islamisme en opposition

Présidente de séance : Mona Harb, politologue et urbaniste, American University of Beirut

- Masserat Amir-Ebrahimi, chercheure associée, Monde Iranien et Indien, CNRS, Paris-Téhéran
La présence des bloggers religieux dans le weblogestan iranien

- Saad Sowayan, anthropologue, King Saud University, Riyad
Médias saoudiens et « lutte contre le terrorisme »

- Muriel Asseburg, directrice du Département Moyen-Orient et Afrique, German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Berlin :
Les partis islamistes dans les médias allemands

14h30-16h : Atelier 3 : Les stratégies médiatiques de l’islamisme

Présidente de séance : Pamela Chrabieh Badine, docteur en sciences des religions, Université de Montréal

- Husam Tammam, chercheur et journaliste, Égypte
Les chaînes satellitaires salafistes

- Alev Inan, chercheure, Département médias et éducation, Passau University
Les usages islamistes d’internet

- Anne-Béatrice Clasmann, journaliste, DPA, Istanbul
Scoop ou responsabilité ? Comment les journalistes devraient-ils faire face aux messages terroristes ?

16h30-18h : Table ronde : Médias et « lutte contre le terrorisme »

Président de séance : Ahmad Karaoud, directeur du bureau régional Moyen-Orient et Afrique du Nord d’Amnistie Internationale

- Racha Al-Atrach, journaliste, Liban (as-Safir)

- Jihad El-Zein, journaliste, Liban (an-Nahar)

- Paul Khalifé, journaliste (Magazine, à confirmer)

- Fida Ittani, journaliste, Liban (al-Akhbar)

- Birgit Kaspar, correspondante freelance, Beyrouth (Deutschlandradio et autres médias allemands


Mots-clés
  • islamisme, média, télévision, journalisme, Proche-Orient, Liban, Arabie Séoudite, Égypte, Yemen, Algérie, Soudan, Iran, salafisme, blog
Lieu
  • Beyrouth (Liban) (Le Méridien Commodore, Hamra)
Date
  • vendredi 21 novembre 2008
Contact
  • Olfa Lamloum
    courriel : o [point] lamloum (at) ifporient [point] org
    Ifpo - Beyrouth
Url de référence

Pour citer cette annonce

« Beirut Media Forum 2008 : médias et islamismes », Colloque, Calenda, publié le mercredi 12 novembre 2008, http://calenda.revues.org/nouvelle11449.html

3 comments:

  1. Wonderful initiative! We do need profound analysis, especially that many experts tend to reduce Islam to Islamism, and Islamism to terrorism.

    ReplyDelete
  2. MB goes rural
    Rather than merely taking advantage of rural popularity, it is rural ways that are influencing the Muslim Brotherhood, writes Hossam Tammam*
    The May 2008 elections of the Muslim Brotherhood Guidance Bureau show that the group has undergone a major transformation. The Muslim Brotherhood used to be an urban group in its membership and style of management. Now its cultural patterns and loyalties are taking on a rural garb. As a result, the Muslim Brotherhood is losing the clarity of direction and method it once had.
    Over the past few years, the Muslim Brotherhood has been infused with rural elements. Its tone is becoming more and more patriarchal, and its members are showing their superiors the kind of deference associated with countryside traditions. You hear them referring to their top officials as the "uncle hajj ", "the big hajj ", "our blessed one", "the blessed man of our circle", "the crown on our heads", etc. Occasionally, they even kiss the hands and heads of the top leaders. Not long ago, a Muslim Brotherhood parliamentarian kissed the hand of the supreme guide in public.
    These patterns of behaviour are new to the Muslim Brotherhood, a group that emerged and operated mostly in an urban context. The new ways of speech and behaviour, which I will refer to as the "ruralisation" of the Muslim Brotherhood, have affected every aspect of the group's internal operations. In its recent elections, the Muslim Brotherhood maintained a tight lid of secrecy, offered the public contradictory information, and generally seemed to be operating with little regard for established procedure.
    The Muslim Brotherhood Shura Council elections emphasised ritual over order. The main concern of the Brotherhood, throughout the recent elections, seemed to be with maintaining an aura of respect for the leadership and getting the rank-and- file to offer unquestioning loyalty to top officials.
    A system of secondary loyalties has emerged inside the Muslim Brotherhood, in near independence from all considerations of institutional work. Entire geographical areas, indeed entire governorates, are now viewed as political fiefdoms pertaining to one Muslim Brotherhood leader or another. Muslim Brotherhood members would refer to a certain city or governorate as being the turf of certain individuals.
    Duplicity, another trait of rural communities, is also rampant. Feigned allegiance is common, with members saying one thing in private and another in public. As is the custom in the countryside, deference to authority is often coupled with resistance to change. As a result, you'd see members pretending to listen to their Muslim Brotherhood superiors while paying little or no attention to what they say. Many of the new ideas put forward by Muslim Brotherhood leaders have been ignored, or at least diluted and then discarded.
    When a Brotherhood member comes up with a new idea, the Muslim Brotherhood leadership reacts as if that member spoke out of order. Self- criticism is increasingly being frowned upon and the dominant thinking within the Brotherhood is becoming traditionalist and unquestioning.
    The Muslim Brotherhood has been active in recruiting teachers and professors. But most of the new recruits are rural in their culture and understanding of public life. Despite their scholarly pedigree, many of the academics that have joined the Brotherhood are parochial in their understanding of the world. The Muslim Brotherhood has nearly 3,000 university professors in its ranks, and few or any of those are endowed with the habit of critical thinking. They may be academics, but they are no visionaries.
    In the recent Muslim Brotherhood elections, five members of the group's Shura Council won seats in the Guidance Bureau. Most of those were either from rural areas or people with a pronounced rural lifestyle. Four were from the countryside, including Saadeddin El-Husseini from Sharqiya, Mohamed Hamed from Mahala Al-Kobra, Saadeddin El-Katatni from Minya. Only one was from a metropolitan centre: Osama Nasr from Alexandria.
    Over the past decade or so, most of the newcomers to the Guidance Bureau were from the countryside: Mahmoud Hussein from Assiut, Sabri Arafa El-Komi from Daqahliya, and Mohamed Mursi from Sharqiya. Rural governorates, such as Assiut, Minya, Daqahliya and Sharqiya, are now in control of much of the Muslim Brotherhood, especially middle-ranking posts, while Cairo and Alexandria have seen their status gradually erode. The Brotherhood leadership is encouraging the trend, for rural people are less prone to challenging their leaders.
    There was a time when the Muslim Brotherhood appealed mainly to an urban audience. But since the late 1980s things have changed. Due to the long-running confrontation with the regime, the Muslim Brotherhood has found it harder to recruit urban supporters. Also, the lack of innovation in Muslim Brotherhood ways has turned off many city dwellers. Instead of joining the Muslim Brotherhood, the young and disgruntled, as well as those seeking spiritual salvation, have joined the Salafi current or become followers of the country's new breed of well- spoken televangelists. The fact that the Muslim Brotherhood has mostly abandoned religious propagation in favour of politics may have accelerated this trend.
    What the Muslim Brotherhood has to offer is something that city dwellers don't really need. The Muslim Brotherhood offers an alternative family, a cloning of the village community with its personalised support system. This is something that appeals best to new arrivals from the countryside, to people who miss the stability and comfort of a traditional community.
    The attraction of countryside people to the Muslim Brotherhood over the past two decades coincided with the disintegration of the extended family and the weakening of communal ties. Moreover, the Westernisation of city life may have pushed many people with a rural background into seeking a moral and social refuge in the Muslim Brotherhood.
    In universities, the Muslim Brotherhood attracts newcomers to the cities rather than original city dwellers. It is more successful in recruitment among students in Al-Azhar University than in other universities, and more successful in rural governorates than in Cairo and Alexandria.
    Following the 1952 Revolution, Egypt as a whole underwent a wave of ruralisation. But even then, the Muslim Brotherhood focussed its recruitment on people with an urban lifestyle. Fifty years ago, the Muslim Brotherhood recruited mostly among the sons of government employees, teachers, and generally the white-collared class. Egypt's countryside was not welcoming to the Muslim Brotherhood or its outlook. Now, the Muslim Brotherhood has gone so conventional that it is gaining ground in the countryside.
    The Muslim Brotherhood can run effective campaigns and even win elections in many areas in Egypt's countryside. Yet, it is my belief that the countryside is affecting the Muslim Brotherhood more than the Muslim Brotherhood is affecting it.
    In Hassan El-Banna's time, Muslim Brotherhood leaders were mostly urban in their ways: Hassan El-Hodeibi, Omar El-Telmesani, Hassan Ashmawi, Mounir Dallah, Abdel-Qader Helmi and Farid Abdel Khaleq. Even in the countryside, top Muslim Brotherhood members were known for their urban lifestyle: Mohamed Hamed Abul- Naser and Abbas Al-Sisi, for example.
    By contrast, the new breed of Muslim Brotherhood leaders is rural in its ways. This goes even for Cairo-based Muslim Brotherhood leaders including Mohamed Mursi, Saad El-Katatni, Saad Al-Husseini and Sabri Arafa El-Komi. And the Muslim Brotherhood supreme guide, Mahdi Akef, is more rural in his leadership style than his predecessor, Maamoun Al-Hodeibi.
    * The writer is an expert in Islamic movements.
    http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2008/919/op13.htm

    ReplyDelete
  3. Bon, ce fut très intéressant de vous suivre ces trois dernières années. Maintenant que votre blog a été réduit à une page d'annonce de colloques et de séminaires (depuis quand même quelques mois déjà), je quitte le navire. Merci encore une fois Pamela pour tout le merveilleux travail que vous avez mené jusqu'ici et que j'imagine se poursuivra ailleurs que dans ce blog.
    Hasta siempre

    ReplyDelete