Between Us and Them: Deconstructing Ideologies behind the Portrayal of Saudi Women in Canadian Media

The purpose of this study is to investigate binary discourses of self and other constructed by Canadian media in the representation of Saudi women. One of the modest aims of this research is to expound on the status of centralized media coverage in Canada. Drawing on Hegel’s model of dialectics, as...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dahlan, Kinda
Other Authors: Eid, Mahmoud
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20145
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-4717
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-201452018-01-05T19:01:00Z Between Us and Them: Deconstructing Ideologies behind the Portrayal of Saudi Women in Canadian Media Dahlan, Kinda Eid, Mahmoud Hegel Dialectics feminism postmodernism modernism Media representation Edward Said Othering Canadian media Saudi women Identity Orientalism qualitative content analysis non-probability sampling ideology The purpose of this study is to investigate binary discourses of self and other constructed by Canadian media in the representation of Saudi women. One of the modest aims of this research is to expound on the status of centralized media coverage in Canada. Drawing on Hegel’s model of dialectics, as framed by Edward Said’s Orientalism (1978) and David Nikkel’s conception of a moderate postmodernism, this research also aims at contributing to the ongoing modern-postmodern discussion by delineating and examining the ways in which dialectical analysis can aid in the deconstruction of metanarratives in Western culture. Utilizing a qualitative research design that employs multidimensional modes of textual analysis, the thesis examined the changes in the portrayal of Saudi Women through a non-probability sampling of 88 Canadian newspaper articles selected from the Toronto Star, Globe and Mail, and National post between 2001-2009. One major finding was that the metanarratives guiding these representations did not change significantly despite changes in narratives as brought about by several major political events. The implications of this thesis revealed what the ideological influences framing these depictions, as well as whether or not the changes that they have undergone, were self-reifying in nature. The research also highlighted the implications resulting from assessing the ontological identities of Saudi women vis-à-vis a Western framework of values. 2011-08-10T14:37:34Z 2011-08-10T14:37:34Z 2011 2011 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20145 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-4717 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Hegel
Dialectics
feminism
postmodernism
modernism
Media representation
Edward Said
Othering
Canadian media
Saudi women
Identity
Orientalism
qualitative content analysis
non-probability sampling
ideology
spellingShingle Hegel
Dialectics
feminism
postmodernism
modernism
Media representation
Edward Said
Othering
Canadian media
Saudi women
Identity
Orientalism
qualitative content analysis
non-probability sampling
ideology
Dahlan, Kinda
Between Us and Them: Deconstructing Ideologies behind the Portrayal of Saudi Women in Canadian Media
description The purpose of this study is to investigate binary discourses of self and other constructed by Canadian media in the representation of Saudi women. One of the modest aims of this research is to expound on the status of centralized media coverage in Canada. Drawing on Hegel’s model of dialectics, as framed by Edward Said’s Orientalism (1978) and David Nikkel’s conception of a moderate postmodernism, this research also aims at contributing to the ongoing modern-postmodern discussion by delineating and examining the ways in which dialectical analysis can aid in the deconstruction of metanarratives in Western culture. Utilizing a qualitative research design that employs multidimensional modes of textual analysis, the thesis examined the changes in the portrayal of Saudi Women through a non-probability sampling of 88 Canadian newspaper articles selected from the Toronto Star, Globe and Mail, and National post between 2001-2009. One major finding was that the metanarratives guiding these representations did not change significantly despite changes in narratives as brought about by several major political events. The implications of this thesis revealed what the ideological influences framing these depictions, as well as whether or not the changes that they have undergone, were self-reifying in nature. The research also highlighted the implications resulting from assessing the ontological identities of Saudi women vis-à-vis a Western framework of values.
author2 Eid, Mahmoud
author_facet Eid, Mahmoud
Dahlan, Kinda
author Dahlan, Kinda
author_sort Dahlan, Kinda
title Between Us and Them: Deconstructing Ideologies behind the Portrayal of Saudi Women in Canadian Media
title_short Between Us and Them: Deconstructing Ideologies behind the Portrayal of Saudi Women in Canadian Media
title_full Between Us and Them: Deconstructing Ideologies behind the Portrayal of Saudi Women in Canadian Media
title_fullStr Between Us and Them: Deconstructing Ideologies behind the Portrayal of Saudi Women in Canadian Media
title_full_unstemmed Between Us and Them: Deconstructing Ideologies behind the Portrayal of Saudi Women in Canadian Media
title_sort between us and them: deconstructing ideologies behind the portrayal of saudi women in canadian media
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20145
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-4717
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