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International Communication Gazette
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War as a Moral Discourse

Noha Mellor

Kingston University, FASS, Penryhn Road, KT1 2EE Surrey, UK, n.mellor{at}kingston.ac.uk

/ The debate surrounding the coverage of the Iraq War in Arab and western news media has pinpointed the ethical role of the news media in the mediation of suffering. This article analyses the mechanism of mediating war in the front-page articles from four pan-Arab newspapers, printed during the war in 2003. The article draws on Boltanski's discussion of emotional politics or what he terms politics of pity, the aim of which is to trigger sympathy for the Other. The news texts included here are analysed according to their rhetorical strategies and to whether they aim at consolidating a certain ethical stance towards the war. Finally, the article attempts to answer the question of whether this coverage has contributed with rational arguments to the general public debate about the war, thereby fulfilling its role as mediator to the pan-Arab polity.

Key Words: Iraq War • mitigation • moral discourse • pan-Arab press • pity • public sphere • rhetoric

International Communication Gazette, Vol. 71, No. 5, 409-427 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1748048509104989


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