Keywords:
Self-Orientalism projects ‘underdevelopment’ as a unique selling proposition in the Arab region – specifically in creative industries. How to rethink the colonial angle and develop a counter-brand?
How to reassess the split between digital productions as forms of liberal self-expression and religious extremism as led by online-Takfiris? And who owns the digital vernacular?
How did Arab-Muslim encounters with Orientalism shape the colonised mind? And how to mediate Islam through the lens of academic decolonization?
How can we extract meaning from ‘religion-as-brand’ to inform a multidisciplinary research on Islam, identity and mediation in the digital age?
Self-Orientalism projects ‘underdevelopment’ as a unique selling proposition in the Arab region – specifically in creative industries. How to rethink the colonial angle and develop a counter-brand?
How to reassess the split between digital productions as forms of liberal self-expression and religious extremism as led by online-Takfiris? And who owns the digital vernacular?
How did Arab-Muslim encounters with Orientalism shape the colonised mind? And how to mediate Islam through the lens of academic decolonization?
How can we extract meaning from ‘religion-as-brand’ to inform a multidisciplinary research on Islam, identity and mediation in the digital age?