Matches in Wikidata for { <http://www.wikidata.org/reference/2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 12 of
12
with 100 items per page.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 type Reference @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P123 Q1508259 @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P1476 "Affective Politics of Digital Media: Propaganda by Other Means" @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P1683 "This chapter examines the conspiracy theory of "Love Jihad" across traditional and social media discourse in India as a way to show how affective strategies promoting awareness are employed through logics of "digital governmentality" (Badouard et al., 2016). "Love Jihad" is a campaign started by right-wing Hindu nationalists in 2009 (Gökarıksel et al., 2019) that Muslim men feign love to lure non-Muslim women to marry them in order to convert them to Islam (Rao, 2011)." @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P2093 "Zeinab Farokhi" @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P212 "978-1-00-016917-1" @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P304 "226–239" @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P577 "2020-01-01T00:00:00Z" @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P792 "Hindu Nationalism, News Channels, and "Post-Truth" Twitter: A Case Study of "Love Jihad"" @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P854 _8T2DwAAQBAJ @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P212 urn:ISBN:978-1-00-016917-1 @default.
- 2db42e05e6749c4caf535b876ee7b824b964b0d1 P577 018d3e563d283a80cd8422d6196984eb @default.