Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
Winner of the ICA ACJS Outstanding Book Award

"A compelling analysis . . . Osman does an excellent job of articulating the histories and traces of what she calls both foreign and indigenous forms of modernisation, and helpfully details the narratives of successive foreign incursions and their backlashes. She convincingly shows that any perspective which poses contemporary American/global ideas of modernity as being in direct contrast with deep-seated and supposedly static forms of tribal patriarchy and tradition is of little help in understanding the contemporary situation." --Critical Studies in Television


"In Television and the Afghan Culture Wars, Wazhmah Osman takes readers on a powerful tour of Afghan media, politics, and society. . . . A rich analysis of the local-global nexus. . . . Fiercely critical of the imperial gaze." --Television and New Media


"Television and the Afghan Culture Wars poignantly critiques discourses of failure and immutability, bringing to the foreground the dynamism and talents of an Afghan population that is well-integrated with global flows of consumption and entertainment. Nuanced and deeply researched." --Iranian Studies
"An excellent introductory text on contemporary Afghanistan through a non-western perspective that centers the everyday life, agency, and desires of ordinary Afghans." --International Journal of Middle East Studies
"Osman's analysis of the televisual medium in Afghanistan is valuable and serves as a timely marker of the end of an era and the beginning of another." --Media, Culture, and Society
"Osman's book is a lucid read about complicated dynamics." --Interventions
"An insider look into Afghanistan's social norms and cultural narratives." --SouthAsia
"Television and the Afghan Culture Wars is an insightful, powerful book. Weaving together nuanced ethnography, complex media theory, and even a touch of personal memoir, Osman provides a compelling perspective on the world of Afghan television. Nuanced and deeply researched, the book is an important contribution to a number of fields, including war and conflict studies, media globalization, and development communication."--Matt Sienkiewicz, author of The Other Air Force: U.S. Efforts to Reshape Middle Eastern Media since 9/11

"This is the first richly observed ethnographic account of the landscape of media in post-US invasion Afghanistan. Osman’s self-reflexive voice in telling the story of the dynamic media field in Afghanistan is in and of itself of import. The limited scholarship that exists on media and democracy under occupation in the Global South tends to reproduce paternalistic narratives of development. In contrast, this critical work foregrounds the geopolitical context that leads to a television 'boom,' highlighting the important role of women and ethnic minority communities in Afghani media production and consumption. Television and Afghan Culture Wars is a must read for scholars and students of global media and American empire."--Paula Chakravartty, coeditor of Race, Empire and the Crisis of the Subprime

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. Legitimizing Modernity: Indigenous Modernities, Foreign Incursions, and Their Backlashes
Chapter 2. Imperialism, Globalization, and Development: Overlaps and Disjunctures
Chapter 3. Afghan Television Production: A Distinctive Political Economy
Chapter 4. Producers and Production: The Development Gaze and the Imperial Gaze
Chapter 5. Reaching Vulnerable and Dangerous Populations: Women and the Pashtuns
Chapter 6. Reception and Audiences: The Demands and Desires of Afghan People
Conclusion: The Future of Media, the Future of Afghanistan
Appendix A: Ethnic Groups Table
Appendix B: Media Funding Sources and Recipients Table
Appendix C: TV Stations and Affiliations Table
Notes
References
Index

Television and the Afghan Culture Wars

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 9 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Wazhmah Osman

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      View other formats and editions of Television and the Afghan Culture Wars by Wazhmah Osman

      Publisher: University of Illinois Press
      Publication Date: 14/12/2020
      ISBN13: 9780252043550, 978-0252043550
      ISBN10: 0252043553

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      Winner of the ICA ACJS Outstanding Book Award

      "A compelling analysis . . . Osman does an excellent job of articulating the histories and traces of what she calls both foreign and indigenous forms of modernisation, and helpfully details the narratives of successive foreign incursions and their backlashes. She convincingly shows that any perspective which poses contemporary American/global ideas of modernity as being in direct contrast with deep-seated and supposedly static forms of tribal patriarchy and tradition is of little help in understanding the contemporary situation." --Critical Studies in Television


      "In Television and the Afghan Culture Wars, Wazhmah Osman takes readers on a powerful tour of Afghan media, politics, and society. . . . A rich analysis of the local-global nexus. . . . Fiercely critical of the imperial gaze." --Television and New Media


      "Television and the Afghan Culture Wars poignantly critiques discourses of failure and immutability, bringing to the foreground the dynamism and talents of an Afghan population that is well-integrated with global flows of consumption and entertainment. Nuanced and deeply researched." --Iranian Studies
      "An excellent introductory text on contemporary Afghanistan through a non-western perspective that centers the everyday life, agency, and desires of ordinary Afghans." --International Journal of Middle East Studies
      "Osman's analysis of the televisual medium in Afghanistan is valuable and serves as a timely marker of the end of an era and the beginning of another." --Media, Culture, and Society
      "Osman's book is a lucid read about complicated dynamics." --Interventions
      "An insider look into Afghanistan's social norms and cultural narratives." --SouthAsia
      "Television and the Afghan Culture Wars is an insightful, powerful book. Weaving together nuanced ethnography, complex media theory, and even a touch of personal memoir, Osman provides a compelling perspective on the world of Afghan television. Nuanced and deeply researched, the book is an important contribution to a number of fields, including war and conflict studies, media globalization, and development communication."--Matt Sienkiewicz, author of The Other Air Force: U.S. Efforts to Reshape Middle Eastern Media since 9/11

      "This is the first richly observed ethnographic account of the landscape of media in post-US invasion Afghanistan. Osman’s self-reflexive voice in telling the story of the dynamic media field in Afghanistan is in and of itself of import. The limited scholarship that exists on media and democracy under occupation in the Global South tends to reproduce paternalistic narratives of development. In contrast, this critical work foregrounds the geopolitical context that leads to a television 'boom,' highlighting the important role of women and ethnic minority communities in Afghani media production and consumption. Television and Afghan Culture Wars is a must read for scholars and students of global media and American empire."--Paula Chakravartty, coeditor of Race, Empire and the Crisis of the Subprime

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction
      Chapter 1. Legitimizing Modernity: Indigenous Modernities, Foreign Incursions, and Their Backlashes
      Chapter 2. Imperialism, Globalization, and Development: Overlaps and Disjunctures
      Chapter 3. Afghan Television Production: A Distinctive Political Economy
      Chapter 4. Producers and Production: The Development Gaze and the Imperial Gaze
      Chapter 5. Reaching Vulnerable and Dangerous Populations: Women and the Pashtuns
      Chapter 6. Reception and Audiences: The Demands and Desires of Afghan People
      Conclusion: The Future of Media, the Future of Afghanistan
      Appendix A: Ethnic Groups Table
      Appendix B: Media Funding Sources and Recipients Table
      Appendix C: TV Stations and Affiliations Table
      Notes
      References
      Index

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