LEADER 03712cam a2200493 i 4500001 276865 005 20240621233059.0 006 m o d f 007 cr bn||||||||| 008 140730s2014 paua ob f000 0 eng c 020 |z1584876298 020 |z9781584876298 035 (OCoLC)ocn884880442 035 276865 042 pcc 049 LHMA 040 AWC |beng |erda |epn |cAWC |dGPO |dNOC |dOKU |dOCLCF |dGPO |dOCLCQ |dDIBIB |dVLB |dLWA |dINT |dBRX |dOCLCQ |dNLMVD |dLHM 050 4 P96.T47 099 COMPUTER FILE 245 00 Visual propaganda and extremism in the online environment / |cCarol K. Winkler, Cori E. Dauber, editors. 264 1 Carlisle, PA : |bStrategic Studies Institute and U.S. Army War College Press, |c2014. 300 1 online resource (x, 242 pages) : |billustrations 336 text |btxt |2rdacontent 337 computer |bc |2rdamedia 338 online resource |bcr |2rdacarrier 340 |gmonochrome |2rdacc 347 text file |2rdaft 500 "July 2014." 504 Includes bibliographical references. 505 0 Radical visual propaganda in the online environment : an introduction / Cori E. Dauber and Carol K. Winkler -- Gathering data through court cases : implications for understanding visual messaging / Anne Stenersen -- Visual reconciliation as a strategy of response to offending images online / Carol K. Winkler -- Teaching hate : the role of internet visual imagery in the radicalization of white ethno-terrorists in the United States / Michael S. Waltman -- "Counter" or "alternative" : contesting video narratives of violent Islamist extremism / Scott W. Ruston and Jeffry R. Halverson -- The branding of violent jihadism / Cori E. Dauber -- Conceptualizing radicalization in a market for loyalties / Shawn Powers and Matt Armstrong -- Semantic processing of visual propaganda in the online environment / Saeid Balkesin -- Big pictures and visual propaganda : the lessons of research on the "effects" of photojournalistic icons / Natalia Mielczarek and David D. Perlmutter -- Responses and recommendations / Cori E. Dauber and Louis H. Jordan, Jr. 520 Visual images have been a central component of propaganda for as long as propaganda has been produced. But recent developments in communication and information technologies have given terrorist and extremist groups options and abilities they never would have been able to come close to even 5 or 10 years ago. There are terrorist groups who, with very little initial investment, are making videos that are coming so close to the quality of BBC or CNN broadcasts that the difference is meaningless, and with access to the web they have instantaneous access to a global audience. Given the broad social science consensus on the power of visual images relative to that of words, the strategic implications of these groups' sophistication in the use of images in the online environment is carefully considered in a variety of contexts by the authors in this collection. 588 0 Print version record. 591 Record updated by Marcive processing 21 June 2024 650 0 Terrorism and mass media. 650 0 Mass media and propaganda. 650 0 Visual communication |xPolitical aspects. 650 0 Internet |xPolitical aspects. 650 0 Extremist Web sites. 700 1 Winkler, Carol, |eeditor. 700 1 Dauber, Cori Elizabeth, |eeditor. 710 2 Army War College (U.S.). |bStrategic Studies Institute, |epublisher. 710 2 Army War College (U.S.). |bPress, |epublisher. 856 40 |uhttps://publications.armywarcollege.edu/pubs/2285.pdf |zOpen access from U.S. Army War College 852 |ber