Ali A. Dashti, Ali A. Al-Kandari, Talal M. Almutairi, Albaraa F. Altourah, Abdulmohsen Jamal
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This study explores the political branding of a powerless small state, the state of Kuwait during the reign of Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem, from 1950 to 1965. The study uses models developed by Anholt for a strategic perspective on nation branding and by Bolin and Miazhevich for tactical communication in nation branding. This study explores the use of strategic communication in an Islamic-Arabic culture to brand Kuwait as a sovereign nation. At the strategic level, it employs the components of strategy, substance, and symbolic action, and at the tactical level, it uses the components of agents, audience analysis, temporal orientation and media to examine symbolic action. Using those models and following a qualitative historical analysis, the study identifies and analyzes the efforts of Sheikh Al-Salem to transform Kuwait from a Sheikhdom to Statehood in the 1950s. Those efforts helped to deter Iraq's threat to the Kuwaiti sovereignty as well as establish a self-governing, constitutional monarchy in the 1960s. The study concludes by evaluating the effectiveness of Sheikh Al-Salem's efforts as measured by tangible outcomes.
本研究探讨了一个无能为力的小国,即谢赫·阿卜杜拉·塞勒姆(Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem)统治时期的科威特,从1950年到1965年的政治烙印。本研究采用了安霍尔特(Anholt)的国家品牌战略视角模型和博林(Bolin)和米亚泽维奇(Miazhevich)的国家品牌战术传播模型。本研究探讨了在伊斯兰-阿拉伯文化中使用战略沟通来将科威特打造成一个主权国家。在战略层面,它采用战略、实质和象征行动的组成部分;在战术层面,它采用代理人、受众分析、时间取向和媒介的组成部分来考察象征行动。利用这些模型并进行定性历史分析,本研究确定并分析了Sheikh Al-Salem在1950年代为将科威特从一个酋长国转变为一个国家所做的努力。这些努力有助于阻止伊拉克对科威特主权的威胁,并在1960年代建立了一个自治的君主立宪制国家。研究最后以实际成果来评估谢赫·塞勒姆努力的有效性。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Communication Inquiry emphasizes interdisciplinary inquiry into communication and mass communication phenomena within cultural and historical perspectives. Such perspectives imply that an understanding of these phenomena cannot arise soley out of a narrowly focused analysis. Rather, the approaches emphasize philosophical, evaluative, empirical, legal, historical, and/or critical inquiry into relationships between mass communication and society across time and culture. The Journal of Communication Inquiry is a forum for such investigations.