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Date: 2018
Abstract: This thesis looks into representations of Palestinian and Israeli-Jewish non-elite civilians in the liberal press in Britain, namely the Guardian and the Independent newspapers. The period examined in the research follows the al-Aqsa Intifadah (since September 2000) and the Arab-Israeli conflict during the 2000s (2000- 2010). The research findings look specifically into the coverage of the peace months of July and December 2000. The primary proposition of the thesis follows the burgeoning literature regarding the parallel, centuries-old histories of the Arab, Jew and the Idea-of-Europe in tandem, in one breath as it may (e.g., Anidjar, 2003, 2007; Kalmar and Penslar, 2005; Boyarin, 2009). This theorisation finds the Arab and Jew as two formational Others to the Idea-of-Europe, with the Jew imagined as the religious and internal enemy to Europe and the Arab as the political and external enemy (Anidjar, 2003). This research enquires how liberal-left forms of racialisations (not only extreme right racialisations) towards the Arab and Jew are contingent upon these centuries-old images and imaginaires, even during moments of peacemaking (not only times of heightened violence). The main hypothesis of the research is that in the mediated, Manichean packaging of the Arab-Israeli conflict in both newspapers the Palestinian and Israeli-Jew are reduced to two sediment polarized identities where no Palestinian exists outside the articulation of being oppositional to the Israeli-Jew through difference marked by violence, and vice versa. Critical Solidarity is proposed as a mode of Peace Journalism (e.g., Galtung, 2000; Lynch and McGoldrick, 2005; Kempf, 2007) which hopes to address concerns at the intersection of news reporting about the conflict and race.