[…] Maasri argues that civil wars challenge the ways we conventionally think about graphic propaganda. Most authors writing on the subject tend to focus on two kinds of protagonists: hegemonic states such as Hitler's Germany, which control the media and shut down any opposition; or 'underground' activists such as the affishistes in Paris in 1968. In a civil war, where neighboring communities contest their rights, this simple topopgraphy of power does not hold. Without a clearly defined centre of power, meaning itself is fragmented. […]
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