New book sheds light on Pakistani media and society

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LAHORE: Pakistan’s mass media are known to be robust and restrained at the same time. Nation’s print, electronic and social media have survived a repeated onslaught on their freedom and even threats on their survival throughout the history of the country as an independent state.

A new book, From Terrorism to Television: Dynamics of Media, State, and Society in Pakistan, published by Routledge (London and India), narrates this story with scholarly and well-researched themes contributed by university professors, researchers, and journalists from Pakistan, England, Australia and the United States.

Co-editors of the book, Qaisar Abbas and Farooq Sulehria, , in the first chapter, have set the tone of the volume with a sound theoretical framework and a thorough survey of the evolution of the media in Pakistan within the context of freedom of expression.

Mr Abbas is a media scholar and former professor and an assistant dean based in the United States. Mr Sulehria, a known journalist in Pakistan, is an assistant professor at the Beaconhouse National University (BNU).

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Farooq Sulehria has a PhD in Development Studies (SOAS) and MA degrees in Global Media and Post-National Communication (SOAS) and Mass Communication (University of Punjab). Before joining BNU in 2018, he worked as a Senior Teaching Fellow and a Teaching Fellow, for three years, at SOAS University of London. He was also a Visiting Lecturer at the University of East London. In the past, he has worked as a journalist with mainstream dailies such as The News (Rawalpindi), The Nation (Lahore), The Frontier Post (Lahore) and Daily Mashriq (Karachi). Since 2005, he has been contributing an op-ed column to The News. Besides contributing to national and international media outlets, he has authored and translated over a dozen books on politics and religion, both in Urdu and English.

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