Mahmoud Abbas – Antenna http://blog.commarts.wisc.edu Responses to Media and Culture Thu, 30 Mar 2017 23:48:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.5 And You Thought We Didn’t Care http://blog.commarts.wisc.edu/2009/11/13/and-you-thought-we-didnt-care/ http://blog.commarts.wisc.edu/2009/11/13/and-you-thought-we-didnt-care/#comments Fri, 13 Nov 2009 10:40:05 +0000 http://blog.commarts.wisc.edu/?p=241 Who wants to do some research?  Me neither, let’s just Google instead (and for those of you snarkily remarking that you thought that that’s what Cultural Studies research is…shhhhhhh).

Last week Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas announced his intention not to run for reelection (big) if and when a vote is held.  This isn’t the forum to discuss the political significance of this move, but I thought I’d throw out some quick observations on the international media side of the story.  Here’s a quick list of how a variety of news sites were treating the story roughly a day after the announcement:

Maan News (West Bank)- Multiple stories that took up about half of the front page on the site.

Al Jazeera (Qatar)- Second story on front page with large picture.

Haaretz (Israel)- Fourth story on the front page.

Jerusalem Post (Israel)- Fourth story on the front page, already reporting the inevitable “Abbas may change mind” which perhaps makes it a slightly newer story.

LeMonde (France)- Not mentioned on front page but noted as part of a Goldstone Report story and editorial on the international page.

Jyllands-Posten (Denmark) Last two articles on international page, ready to disappear at  any moment.

New York Times– A fairly substantial front page story with a picture of Abbas.

Wall Street Journal– Top story in “World” Section.

Washington Post- Featured prominently under “More Headlines.”

London Times–  Second story in “World” section, saying Abbas will “abandon post in fresh peace blow.”

Guardian (UK)- Small story featured half way down the World Page.

I don’t know much about Asian sources but I couldn’t find a single mention in English at least.

What might we learn from this?  Well, for one, it probably helps confirm the notion that stories relating to Israel are of greater interest to the American press than continental Europe.  The New York Times was the only source to give the story the kind of attention it received locally, with the most obvious difference being the use of a photograph on the front page.  The ‘liberal media’ accusers probably have something to say about that but really it seems more like evidence that people simply care about this issue within the Times‘ target demographic.  Being based in a city with a million Jews and a strong Arab community certainly helps.  There was a relative lack of obvious (meaning REALLY obvious) politicization of the story with the exception of The London Times, which seemed to be reporting the story as an aggressive, anti-peace move on Abbas’ part and LeMonde, which didn’t want to take a break from the Goldstone report in order to look at the messy side of internal Palestinian politics.  Both approaches are kind of disappointing and easily in line with the London Times’ staunch conservativism and Le Monde‘s tradition of harsh criticism of Israel.

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