The Muslims Fit to Print

The Muslims Fit to Print

SREXXX10.1177/2332649220903747Sociology of Race and EthnicityYazdiha 903747research-article2020 Racialization and Muslim Experience Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 2020, Vol. 6(4) 501 –516 All the Muslims Fit to Print: © American Sociological Association 2020 DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/2332649220903747 10.1177/2332649220903747 Racial Frames as Mechanisms sre.sagepub.com of Muslim Ethnoracial Formation in the New York Times from 1992 to 2010 Hajar Yazdiha1 Abstract A generative turn in scholarship examines the institutional and political dimensions of Islamophobia, conceptualizing Muslim representations as a mechanism of ethnoracial formation in which the media is one such site of racialization. Moments of great political and cultural transformation can motivate and activate these racial projects, generating racialized representations that attach racial meaning to bodies. Much of the research on Muslim representations in news media centers on this very question: did the attacks of 9/11 usher in a new racial project? Previous studies offer competing hypotheses. Bridging social movement and communication theories with a theory of ethnoracial formation, the author develops an approach for evaluating racial framing processes through a comparison of diagnostic, prognostic, and motivational frames. The author applies this approach using computational text analysis techniques to examine latent shifts in the racial framing of Muslims in the New York Times in the decade before and after 9/11. The author finds evidence of increasingly racialized, but more complex, representations of Muslims in the decade after 9/11 in which diagnostic frames evolve from locating social problems in states and institutions to locating social problems in Muslim bodies. Prognostic frames shift from institutional reforms to those targeting group pathology. The author argues that excavating the latent mechanisms of racial projects helps us better understand the dynamic and ongoing processes of ethnoracial formation. Keywords Muslims, racialization, media, frames, islamophobia, culture As anti-Muslim attitudes have grown since laws and policies, discourses and symbolic repre- September 11, 2011, increasing discrimination and sentations, that draw on racist ideology to render violence against those who are Muslim and those Muslims as urgent subjects of public concern who appear Muslim (Kishi 2016; Ogan et al. 2014), (Alsultany 2012; Aydin and Hammer 2010; Chon scholars and activists have turned toward explain- and Arzt 2005; Saeed 2007; Said 1979, 1997; Selod ing both the causes of Islamophobia and the conse- 2018; Shaheen 2012; Stubbs 2004; Yazdiha 2014). quences of anti-Muslim racial projects for Muslims’ These representations have profound effects on ethnoracial social locations. Here, Islamophobia is publics’ perceptions of threat, driving support for conceptualized not as a subconscious pathology but rather as an active set of racializing practices, 1Department of Sociology, University of Southern the racial projects of ethnoracial formation (Ansari California, Los Angeles, CA, USA and Hafez 2012; Elver 2012; Garner and Selod Corresponding Author: 2015; Husain 2017; Love 2017; Maghbouleh 2017; Hajar Yazdiha, University of Southern California, Meer 2013; Rana 2007; Selod 2018; Volpp 2002; Department of Sociology, 851 Downey Way, HSH 314, Zopf 2018). These practices are mutually consti- Los Angeles, CA 90089-1059, USA tuted by structural and cultural processes through Email: [email protected] 502 Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 6(4) racialized policies that subjugate Muslims (Baum changed after 9/11, I develop a theoretical frame- and Potter 2008; Ciftci 2012; Das et al. 2009). work bridging social movement and communica- Many studies cite the media as a powerful site tion theories with ethnoracial formation theory to for these racial projects, a space where cultural analyze the connection between frames and racial knowledge and ideology is constructed and repro- projects of ethnoracial formation. This framework duced (Adorno 2001; Alsultany 2012; Gonzalez- unpacks the tasks of framing in three parts that con- Sobrino 2019; Horkheimer, Adorno, and Noeri stitute a racial project: diagnostic framing, which 2002), a political institution (Cater 1959; Cook constructs a social problem by assigning racial 1998; Schudson 2002) with an “ideological state meanings to the group; prognostic framing, which apparatus” (Hall 1982), occupying a powerful role assigns potential solutions to the social problem, in the construction of social reality. As Omi and providing a rationale for social control of the group; Winant (2014) explain, racial projects are the and motivational framing, which mobilizes publics “building blocks” of ethnoracial formation, the to adhere to and maintain the racial project. I argue mechanisms through which structures are linked to that connecting these components of framing to representation, “glued” together by racial ideol- mechanisms of ethnoracial formation helps scholars ogy. Institutions such as news media that produce test (1) whether and how frames generate racialized what Omi and Winant call “propaganda initia- representations and (2) whether and how these rep- tives” are “bubbling cauldrons of racial conflict” resentations shift with changing political-cultural where racial projects take place. Moments of great contexts in an ongoing and dynamic process of eth- political and cultural transformation can motivate noracial formation (Omi and Winant 2014). and activate these racial projects, generating My article proceeds as follows. First, I develop a racialized representations that attach racial mean- theoretical framework for analyzing frames as ing to bodies (Omi and Winant 2014:264). As a racial projects of ethnoracial formation. Next, I result, how the media, as a framing institution evaluate how existing studies of media representa- (Watkins-Hayes, Pittman-Gay, and Beaman 2012), tions of Muslims map onto this new framework, frames groups and their relations matters a great highlighting competing hypotheses. Next, I describe deal for making sense of ethnoracial formation the data and methods, explaining the value of using processes. computational techniques such as topic modeling to Much of the research on Muslim representa- analyze the latent racial frames that structure dis- tions in news media centers on this very question: course. From a corpus of New York Times articles did the attacks of 9/11 usher in a new racial proj- from 1992 to 2010, I use latent Dirichlet allocation ect? After all, the long trajectory of racialized rep- (LDA) topic models and naive Bayesian classifica- resentations of Arabs and Muslims is well tion techniques to examine the most salient environ- documented (Alsultany 2012; Cainkar 2009; Love ment of representations through which Muslims are 2017; Said 1997; Selod 2018; Shaheen 2012). In framed over time. Finally, I discuss the results, previous studies, the evidence for a new racial proj- which offer evidence of increasingly racialized, but ect was mixed (Alsultany 2012; Aydin and Hammer more complex, representations of Muslims in the 2010; Bail 2012; Bleich, Nisar, and Abdelhamid decade after 9/11. I conclude with a discussion of 2016; Powell 2011; Saeed 2007). In this article, I implications, and I offer examples of how these organize previous studies and compare them results may drive further exploration of the cultural against processes of Muslim representation in a mechanisms behind racial projects. paper of record, the New York Times, following previous studies that identify the Times as a reliable archival source (Amenta et al. 2009; Bleich et al. RACIAL FRAMING AS 2016; Gonzalez-Sobrino 2019; Silva 2017), what A MECHANISM OF Stoker called, “a trendsetter for the US press, [that] helped validate objective reporting” (p. 7). ETHNORACIAL FORMATION Although not representative of all news media, the To analyze racial projects in news media, I develop Times is considered an influential mainstream news a framework for analyzing framing tasks as racial source and offers a useful window into the repre- projects of ethnoracial formation. Research at the sentations of Muslims received by a wide national intersection of social movement theory, cultural readership (Chermak and Gruenewald 2006). sociology, and communication theory examines To analyze whether and how the shape of how frames are imposed on social life. Frames Muslim representations in the New York Times are the “schemata of interpretation that enable Yazdiha 503 individuals to locate, perceive, identify, and label” attributes blame. The prognostic frame expresses issues, people, and events (Benford and Snow the potential or desired solution(s) to the problem. 2000; Goffman 1974; Snow et al. 1986). Like a Finally, the motivational frame activates a “call to picture frame, these frames effectively narrow arms,” encouraging collective action to solve the attention in on a particular aspect of a story, obscur- problem (Benford and Snow 2000). These three ing what is “out of frame,” shaping what an audi- framing tasks are not independent but rather often ence understands of a subject (Gamson and intersect and work in conjunction with one another. Modigliani 1989). In particular, diagnostic and prognostic frames are The media can be conceived of as a framing often coupled as the “identification of specific institution, an intermediary “between micro-level problems and causes tends to constrain the range of perceptions and actions and macro-structural

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