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Dina Matar

Dina Matar
Matar in 2020
BornMarch 1955
Alma mater
EmployerSOAS University of London
SpouseJohn Taysom

Dina Matar FRSA (born March 1955) is a professor of political communication and Arab media, with a focus on Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria, and chair of SOAS University of London's Centre for Global Media and Communication. Prior to academia, Matar was a news correspondent, editor, and analyst.

Education and personal life

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Matar grew up in Dheisheh refugee camp. Her father Henry Matar (1916–1933) was a professor.[1] Matar did her undergraduate Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Chemistry at the University of Jordan. In 1988, she moved to a suburb of London with her English husband John Taysom, whom she met in Bahrain, and their son.[2][3] She went on to complete a Master of Science (MSc) in Comparative Politics in 1999 and a PhD in Media and Communication in 2005, both from the London School of Economics (LSE).[4]

Career

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Matar began her career in journalism, working as a correspondent for outlets such as Reuters. Upon completing her PhD, she became a research fellow at her alma mater the LSE and a journalism lecturer at City, University of London. She joined SOAS University of London in 2005 as a Professor. In 2014, she was made Chair of the university's Centre for Global Media and Communications.[4]

Alongside Lina Khatib, Tarik Soubry and John Esposito, Matar was a founding editor of the Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication.[5] Matar published her first book and monograph What it Means to be Palestinian: Stories of Palestinian Peoplehood in 2010, in which she collected interviews with Palestinians across the Levant on their personal and family stories contextualised with broader history.[6] She reunited with Khatib to co-author The Hizbullah Phenomenon (2014) with her and Alef Alshaer.[7][8] She edited the volumes Narrating Conflict in the Middle East: Discourse, Image and Communications Practices in Lebanon and Palestine (2013) with Zahera Harb[9] and Gaza as Metaphor (2016) with Helga Tawil-Souri.[10]

From 2018 to 2024,[11] Matar chaired the Centre for Palestine Studies. From 2020 to 2022, she headed School of Interdisciplinary Studies.[4]

In October 2023, Matar was one of those over 800 scholars to warn of a potential genocide in Gaza.[12] Matar reunited with Tawil-Souri to edit the collection Producing Palestine: The Creative Production of Palestine through Contemporary Media.[13]

Bibliography

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Books

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  • What it Means to be Palestinian: Stories of Palestinian Peoplehood (2010)
  • The Hizbullah Phenomenon: Politics and Communication (2014), with Lina Khatib and Atef Alshaer

Edited volumes

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  • Narrating Conflict in the Middle East: Discourse, Image and Communications Practices in Lebanon and Palestine (2013), edited with Zahera Harb
  • Gaza as Metaphor (2016), edited with Helga Tawil-Souri
  • Producing Palestine: The Creative Production of Palestine through Contemporary Media (2024), edited with Helga Tawil-Souri
  • Reframing Political Communication in the Middle East and North Africa (2025)
  • Archiving Gaza in the Present: The Power of Bearing Witness at a Time of War and Destruction (2025), co-edited with Venetia Porter
  • Palestine as a Communicative Epistemology: Confronting the Mediation of Total Violence, edition of Communication, Culture & Critique (2025)
  • Reframing Political Communication in the Middle East and North Africa (2025)

Chapters

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  • "News Stories and Disaporic Discourses of Identification: the Palestinians in Britain" in Diasporic ruptures: globality, migrancy and expressions of identity (2007)
  • "Palestinians, News and the Diasporic Condition" and "What it Means to be Palestinian: News and the Diasporic Condition" in Arab Media and Political Renewal: Community, Legitimacy and Public Life (2007)
  • "Performance, Language and Power: Nasrallah's Mediated Charisma" in Arabic and the Media: Linguistic Analyses and Applications (2009)
  • "Rethinking the Arab State and Culture" in Arab Cultural Studies: Mapping the Field (2011)
  • Foreword in Arab Cultural Studies: History, Politics and the Popular (2012)
  • "Comparative Media Research in the Middle East" in The Handbook of Global Media Research (2012)
  • "A Critical Reflection on Aesthetics and Politics in the Digital Age" in Uncommon Grounds: New Media and Critical Practice in the Middle East and North Africa (2014)
  • "Narratives and the Syrian Uprising: The Role of Stories in Political Activism and Identity Struggles" in Bullets and Bulletins: Media and Politics in the Wake of the Arab uprisings (2016)
  • "First Framing and News: Lessons from Reporting Jordan in Crises" in Reporting the Middle East: The Practices of News in the Twenty-First Century (2017)
  • "Liminality; gendering and Syrian alternative media spaces" in Spaces of War, War of Spaces (2020), with Khouloud Helmi
  • "Comparative Analysis of Israeli and PLO Diplomacy Practices during the May 2021 Israeli Attacks against Gaza" in Global Media Coverage of the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: Reporting the Sheikh Jarrah Evictions (2023), with Sherouk Maher
  • "Palestinian storytelling, witnessing and remembering as politics in the margin" in Reframing Political Communication and Media Practices in the Middle East and North Africa (2024)
  • "Comparative analysis of the BBC and AJE coverage in the first week of Israel's 2023/24 war against Gaza: test case for media and conflict theories and news practices" in News Media and War in the Digital Age (2024), with Loreley Hahn-Herrera
  • "Im(possibilities) of Palestinian 'media audiences' in times of permanent war and excessive mediation" in De-colonising audience studies (2024)

Articles

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  • "What It Means to Be Shiite in Lebanon: Al Manar and the Imagined Community of Resistance" in Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture (2006), with Farah Dakhlallah
  • "Diverse Diasporas, One Meta-Narrative: Palestinians in the UK Talking about 11 September 2001" in Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies (2006)
  • "The Palestinians in Britain, News and the Politics of Recognition" in International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics (2007)
  • "Heya Television: A feminist counterpublic for Arab women?" in Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East (2007)
  • "Editorial: Communicating Politics in Culture" in Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication (2008)
  • "The Power of Conviction: Nasrallah's Rhetoric and Mediated Charisma in the context of the 2006 July War" in Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication (2008)
  • "Contextualising the Media and the Uprisings: A return to History" in Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication (2012)
  • "Hassan Nasrallah: The cultivation of image and language in the making of a charismatic leader" in Communication, Culture & Critique (2015)
  • "Introduction: Toward a Sociology of Communication and Conflict: Iraq and Syria" in Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication (2017)
  • "PLO Cultural Activism: Mediating Liberation aesthetics in revolutionary contexts" in Comparative Studies of South Asia Africa and the Middle East (2018)
  • "The Syrian Regime's Strategic Communication: Practices and Ideology" in International Journal of Communication (2019)
  • "The PLO's political communication arena; struggle over media legitimacy and domination" in British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies (2022)
  • "What it means to be Palestinian: Reflections on anti-colonial identities in times of excessive production and destruction" in Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication (2024)
  • "Habitual media: interrogating Western legacy media's complicity in the epistemic 'war' against Palestinians" in Third World Quarterly (2025)

References

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  1. ^ AlShaer, Atef (2011). "Palestinian Mosaic: Stories of Unfinished Struggle - Review of 'What it means to be Palestinian: stories of Palestinian peoplehood' by Dina Matar". Institute for Palestine Studies. Retrieved 28 November 2024.
  2. ^ "John Taysom". The Baron. 29 November 2021. Retrieved 30 June 2025.
  3. ^ Matar, Dina (2016). Yasir Suleiman (ed.). "In, but not Of". Being Palestinian: Personal Reflections on Palestinian Identity in the Diaspora. p. 259. Retrieved 30 November 2024.
  4. ^ a b c "Professor Dina Matar". SOAS University of London. Retrieved 18 July 2024.
  5. ^ "Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication". Stanford University. Retrieved 30 June 2025.
  6. ^ Winstanley, Asa (2 February 2011). "Book review: Rich definition of "What it Means to be Palestinian"". The Electronic Intifada. Retrieved 28 November 2024.
  7. ^ Menshawy, Mustafa (8 July 2016). "Book Review: Lina Khatib, Dina Matar and Atef Alshaer, The Hizbullah Phenomenon: Politics and Communication". Sage Journals. Retrieved 28 November 2024.
  8. ^ Zisser, Eyal. "Reviewed Work: The Hizbullah Phenomenon: Politics and Communication by Lina Khatib, Dina Matar, Atef Alshaer". Bustan: The Middle East Book Review. Retrieved 30 June 2025.
  9. ^ Anisin, Alexei (10 December 2013). "Book Review: Narrating Conflict in the Middle East: Discourse, Image, and Communications Practices in Lebanon and Palestine by Dina Matar and Zahera Harb". LSE. Retrieved 28 November 2024.
  10. ^ Achcar, Gilbert (2016). "Review: Gaza as Metaphor, edited by Helga Tawil-Souri and Dina Matar" (PDF). SOAS University of London. Retrieved 28 November 2024.
  11. ^ "Dina Matar". Act for Pal. Retrieved 30 June 2025.
  12. ^ "800 scholars warn of potential genocide in Gaza". Middle East Monitor. 1 November 2023. Retrieved 18 July 2024.
  13. ^ "Helga Tawil-Souri and Dina Matar, eds., Producing Palestine: The Creative Production of Palestine through Contemporary Media (New Texts Out Now)". Jadaliyya. 20 December 2024. Retrieved 5 March 2025.