Archive for March 2014

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[ecrea] New Book -- Mission Invisible: Race, Religion, and News at the Dawn of the 9/11 Era

Sat Mar 29 11:05:43 GMT 2014





http://www.ubcpress.ca/search/title_book.asp?BookID=299174232


NEW FROM UBC PRESS

Shines a light on post-9/11 news coverage in Canada to uncover racist media representations of Muslims.

UBC Press is pleased to announce the publication of Mission Invisible by Ross Perigoe and Mahmoud Eid.



Mission Invisible
Race, Religion, and News at the Dawn of the 9/11 Era
By Ross Perigoe and Mahmoud Eid

Media Studies, Multiculturalism & Transnationalism, Religion & Society, Race & Ethnicity

ISBN 9780774826488
Paperback $34.95
UBC Press 2014

*Paperback now available for course use and for purchase by individuals for professional development purposes via the links below only, it is not yet released to the general public*

Request an examination copy / Purchase paperback


About the Book

The attacks of 9/11 created a philosophical and cultural shockwave felt around the world. For many Canadians, 9/11 also produced feelings of insecurity, vulnerability, and suspicion of "Muslims" in general. Being Muslim was often seen as being Arab, and diverse Muslim communities were glossed over as if they were invisible. How did these negative attitudes come about?

Many point to the role of the news media in framing and contextualizing events and its complicity in reproducing racist images of Muslim minorities. Strikingly lacking from media analyses, however, is a focus on the most significant stage of reportage: the initial weeks in which the events, surrounding issues, and primary actors of 9/11 were all first framed by journalists. The authors of Mission Invisible chronicle varying racialized constructions of Muslim communities in the news during these initial weeks. Through detailed examination of the naturalized underrepresentation and misrepresentation of Muslim communities, they map the production of racist ideology in the news, parsing textual productions to locate complex patterns of rhetorical devices, dramatic structure, and discursive themes.

In showing how media coverage of Muslim communities was imagined, negotiated, and represented after 9/11, Mission Invisible provides much-needed empirical evidence of how racist discourses are constructed and reinforced by the media in a unique Canadian setting where linguistic and cultural communities are often in contention.

Endorsements

"Anyone interested in the cultural, organizational, and procedural biases in the news media that result in racial stereotyping must read this meticulously researched and compellingly analyzed study of the mass-mediated (mis)representation of Canada’s Muslim communities following 9/11." – Brigitte Nacos, co-author of Selling Fear: Counterterrorism, the Media, and Public Opinion

"Mission Invisible adds immensely to our understanding of the media’s role in shaping attitudes about diverse people in our communities -- people whose alleged ‘difference’ makes them unwelcome and possibly even dangerous. Essential reading for those in media and communication studies, it will also be welcomed by those studying the framing of race, ethnicity, and transnationalism." – Frances Henry, co-author of Discourses of Domination: Racial Bias in the Canadian English-Language Press

"Ross Perigoe and Mahmoud Eid should be applauded for uncovering the ongoing media discrimination faced by Muslims; their book analyzes some of the most passively accepted yet outrageous statements made after the tragedy of 9/11. Without this scholarship, we risk having a chauvinistic period of journalism lost to our collective memory."
– C. Darius Stonebanks, co-editor of Teaching against Islamophobia

About the Authors
Ross Perigoe was an associate professor of journalism at Concordia University, where he taught from 1985 to 2012. In 2009, he received the Canadian Radio and Television News Directors Association’s Michael Monty Memorial Award for excellence in broadcast teaching and mentorship.

Mahmoud Eid is an associate professor at the Department of Communication, University of Ottawa. He is the author of Interweavement: International Media Ethics and Rational Decision-Making (2008), editor of Exchanging Terrorism Oxygen for Media Airwaves: The Age of Terroredia (2014) and Research Methods in Communication (2011), and the co-editor of Basics in Communication and Media Studies (2012), among other publications.

Sample Chapter

Download sample chapter [PDF]

Contents

Preface

Introduction: Mission Visible?
Rationale
Why 9/11 and Canada?
Why Racism?
Why Muslims?
Why The Gazette?
Overview

1 Mission Recognition
The Event
The Medium
The Moment
The Message
The Method
The Procedure

2 Mission Ambition
Impact of the Media
Journalists’ Agendas

3 Mission Decision
The Rhetoric of Racism
The Discourse of Racism
The Discourse of Anti-Racism

4 Mission Oppression
The Discourses of Grief
The Discourses of Justification for War
The Discourses of Readying for War
The Discourses of Orientalism

5 Mission Perception
Shock and Disbelief
Denial
Blamelessness
Anger
Personal Safety
Revenge
Racial Profiling
Fear and Moral Panic
Acceptance
Impact on Quebecers

6 Mission Opposition
Descriptive Analysis of Muslims’ Voices
Discursive Themes of Muslims’ Voices
The Discourse of the "Good" Muslim

7 Mission Position
Writings on Leaders’ Voices
Writings on White Victims’ Voices
Writings on Muslims’ Voices

8 Mission Envision
Representations of Leaders’ Voices
Representations of White Victims’ Voices
Representations of Muslims’ Voices

9 Mission Completion
The Journalistic Process in Context
Newsgathering Practices
The Effects of the Messages
The Anti-Terrorism Act
Racial Profiling

10 Mission Condition
The Gazette: Success or Failure?
White Readership
Muslim Readership
Journalistic Leadership

Conclusion: Mission Invisible!
Why Invisible?
Correcting Vision
Hindsight 20/20

Notes
References
About the Authors
Index




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