Decolonizing the public sphere(s)?: A historical trajectory of justice-seeking subaltern public communication in the Middle East
While the discourse surrounding “decolonizing” risks becoming an abstract notion, the imperative to challenge the monopoly of Eurocentric knowledge systems remains urgent. Committed to the necessity of critical public communication that serves most of the world, the article aims to make a decolonizing intervention into the dominant discussions of critical public communication, which are still largely governed by theories of the public sphere(s). Rather than providing another critique of these theories, I propose an alternative concept: justice-seeking communication. Justice-seeking communication is a historical episteme and practice of the subaltern populations of the Middle East, uniting them as a reasoning, debating, and justice-demanding public in the face of injustices they encountered and defined as rectifiable oppression through their collective agency. Following a brief historical examination of Middle Eastern petitions and coffeehouses, I discuss how the justice-seeking communicative praxis of subaltern populations can inform our future imaginations of pluriversal critical public communication.
History
School
- Loughborough University, London
Published in
Communication TheoryPublisher
Oxford University Press on behalf of International Communication Association.Version
- VoR (Version of Record)
Rights holder
©The Author(s)Publisher statement
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Acceptance date
2025-02-01Publication date
2025-03-11Copyright date
2025ISSN
1050-3293eISSN
1468-2885Publisher version
Language
- en