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Islamic Cultural History

Decent Essays

Few phenomena have had as significant of an impact on modern culture as terrorism. Following the rise of the Islamic State in 2014, acts of terror perpetrated by the would-be caliphate have headlined global news cycles, rife with displays of atrocity and a deadly ambition to create a country ruled by extremist ideals. However, in the broader context of history, what will have the most significant effect on cultural memory is not the fact that these terrorists and ideologues attempted to form a state, but that it was one claimed to be inherently Islamic. The resulting culture of fear, “othering”, and Islamophobia experienced across the developed world will cement the place of the Islamic State in cultural history, even as the group itself …show more content…

The media has played an unprecedented role in the phenomenon of the Islamic State, and will ensure its continuing relevance in cultural history. Through extensive coverage of its actions, both in the middle east and in the west, the Islamic State has generated a fear of terrorism unlike any in recent history. Constant images of executions, IS flags, and videos of soldiers patrolling captured cities are made inescapable by the prevalence of social media. This coverage “…has not caused the change in the nature of acts of terror over the past decades but it has made it easier for terrorist organizations to reach and instill fear in (most predominantly) the West” (Galily et al. 1063). Recent evidence supports this, including a 2017 study that determined news reports on terrorism can cause a fear of terrorism in those watching that was previously absent. (Sikorski et al. 840). In addition, the fear caused by the inundation of media surrounding the Islamic State was magnified by often unpredictable lone-wolf attacks on western cities. Concerning this, Kaplan and Costa remark that “…what seemed to have changed … was not the likelihood of dramatic terrorism on the scale of the 9/11 attacks so much as the specter of low-level IS-inspired terrorism in the West” (Kaplan and Costa 929). The knowledge that radicals could perpetrate attacks in major cities like Paris and

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