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U.S. Media and the Framing of Islam After 9/11

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Presentation on theme: "U.S. Media and the Framing of Islam After 9/11"— Presentation transcript:

1 U.S. Media and the Framing of Islam After 9/11
Shelby Grant

2 Abstract Following 9/11, the media framed Islam only in negative, biased, and prejudiced ways. In turn, viewers have been led to view Islam as violence, extremism, and outright terrorism.

3 What is Framing? A method of agenda setting by media networks
“How pieces of information are selected and organized” (Ryan) Information collected is interpreted through a certain lens– in this case, predominately white Christians.

4 Islam as Extremism In television: Martin and Phelan’s study of 4.18 million word body of transcripts from five major T.V. news networks. Most used phrases: “Islamic fundamentalists,” “Islamic militants,” “Islamic extremists.”

5 Islam as Extremism In print: Ervand Abrahamian’s examination of the New York Times This is a Religious War: pictures of atrocities from mediaeval Europe, including Goya’s Spanish Inquisition Bush’s statement: “crusade against terrorism”

6 Islam as Violence Abrahamian: NYT articles titled “Defusing the Holy Bomb,” “Barbarians at the Gates,” “The Core of Muslim Rage.” Martin and Phelan: “Islamic jihad” one of the most frequently used terms, most often times referring to the physical struggle in a violent form against enemies of Islam.

7 Islam as Violence Framing leads viewers to believe “violence originates in the irrational psyches of the [Islamic] militants, warped by the tenets and practices of Islam” (Baker).

8 Islam as Terrorism Extremism + Violence = Terrorism
Because terrorism is “shocking and sensational,” it demands attention from viewers when presented in the media “Maximum impact of an act of terrorism comes from widespread media coverage” (Powell)

9 Inclusion versus Exclusion
In framing, what is left out is just as important as what is included Lack of any background other than government or military officials “If people knew [the] history, they wouldn’t just sit and listen” (Zinn)

10 Inclusion versus Exclusion
“The current image of Islam that depicts this pure religion as one that promotes intolerance and disruption in a society is contradictory to Islamic teachings” (Baloach)

11 Conclusion By framing Islam in a biased manner and including only limited viewpoints, the U.S. media failed to do their job in covering the aftermath of 9/11.


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