Abstract:
The rise and fall of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has been one of the most significant
phenomena of the 21st Century. Replicating other extremist organizations, the ideological
discourses were propagated using a multitude of platforms including electronic and social media
and publications. Dabiq Magazine has been an authentic and signature source of textual and visual
literature, published online by ISIS, specifically targeting Western youth. The relationship
between the production of such literature by extremist organizations and its discursive
implications for the masses around the globe remains unclear. Towards this end, this research is
both an investigation into how the extremist organizations formulate their narrative around a
particular discourse, through publications and how these discursive inconsistencies and
contradictions are managed to their advantage. At the same time, this research is also,
fundamentally, an inquiry into the practices and advancement of methodologically driven CDA
in examining the terrorism-related literature.
The primary focus of this research is methodological and theoretical, enunciated through a
concern with an interface between the methodological principles and theoretical underpinnings
in interpreting empirical literature under investigation. In examining fifteen issues of Dabiq
Magazine, this research develops a form of Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) to understand the
ISIS discourses ideology and conflict. The contributions of this thesis are advanced through the
interface between the methodological aspects of CDA, theoretical interpretations, and
philosophical underpinnings of contemporary discourse scholars.
The analysis in this thesis develops in two distinct phases. In the initial chapters,
methodological, analytical, and theoretical tools are developed and synthesized resulting in the
crystallization of multiple themes. The primary data for these themes is collected and collated
from all issues of Dabiq Magazines. In the next phase, a detailed examination of each of the
selected themes has been conducted, deploying the analytical and methodological tools
developed in the initial phase. The CDA of these thematic discourses construes an
understanding of the ideology which has historical foundations based on a specific form of
interpretation of Islam.
This CDA also explicates how ISIS has made use of and legitimized Islamic text from Quean and
Hadith. In so doing, they have transformed their Salafist Jihadist ideology and thought of a
myopic world vision into the Islamic State’s version of Shari’ah, which they aspired to deploy
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globally. The analysis also deconstructs multiple discourses which have affected the rest of the
world as a result of a sudden rise of this extremist violent organization. Some of these discourses
have impacted those living in the Middle East while others had a long-lasting impact specifically
on the Muslim population around the globe. This analysis concludes that in the absence of a
unified response to such organizations, there is a likelihood of repetition of such phenomenon in
other parts of the world for political as well as religious reasons.