Description |
1 online resource (xii, 198 pages) : illustrations, charts |
Contents |
1. Media coverage of Muslims: Introduction and overview -- 2. The tone of Muslim coverage -- 3. United States newspaper coverage of Muslims: Main patterns and group comparisons -- 4. Time and tone: Major events and their impact on coverage -- 5. Is the United States unique? Examining newspapers from the Anglophone North and the Global South -- 6. What do newspapers talk about when they talk about Muslims? -- 7. Conclusions and extensions: Islamophobia, constructing boundaries, and tone-.checking the media -- Appendix -- Appendix I: Corpus collection and methodology -- Appendix II: Supplementary materials for the analyses in chapters 2-.6 -- References -- Index |
Summary |
"For decades, scholars and observers have criticized negative media portrayals of Muslims and Islam. Yet most of these critiques are limited by their focus on one specific location, a limited time period, or a single outlet. This book offers the first systematic, large-scale analysis of American newspaper coverage of Muslims through comparisons across groups, time, countries, and topics. It demonstrates conclusively that coverage of Muslims is strikingly negative by every comparative measure examined. Muslim articles are negative relative to those touching on Catholics, Jews, or Hindus, and to those mentioning marginalized groups within the United States as diverse as African Americans, Latinos, Mormons, and atheists. Coverage of Muslims has also been consistently and enduringly negative across the two-decade period between 1996 and 2016. This pattern is not unique to the United States; it also holds in countries such as Britain, Canada, and Australia, although less so in the Global South. Moreover, the strong negativity in the articles is not simply a function of stories about foreign conflict zones or radical Islamist violence, even though it is true that terrorism and extremism have become more prominent themes since 9/11. Strikingly, even articles about mundane topics tend to be negative. The findings suggest that American newspapers may, however inadvertently, contribute to reinforcing boundaries that generate Islamophobic attitudes. To overcome these drawbacks, journalists and citizens can consciously "tone-check" the media to limit the stigmatizing effect of negative coverage so commonly associated with Muslims and Islam"-- Provided by publisher |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (Oxford Scholarship Online, viewed on June 20, 2022) |
Subject |
Muslims -- Press coverage -- United States
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Islam -- Press coverage -- United States
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Journalism -- Objectivity -- United States
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Islam -- Press coverage
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Journalism -- Objectivity
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United States
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Veen, A. Maurits van der, author.
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LC no. |
2021034545 |
ISBN |
9780197611753 |
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0197611753 |
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9780197611739 |
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0197611737 |
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9780197611746 |
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0197611745 |
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