Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Foreword
- Introduction: Islam and the West: A Civilized Dialogue
- 1 The Andalusian Model and Muslim–Christian Dialogue Today
- 2 The Muslim Perspective on Western Attitudes to Islamic Unity
- 3 Islam and the West: Theoretical Confusion
- 4 Western Media from the Viewpoint of the Islamic World
- 5 Media Perceptions and Misperceptions: A Western Perspective
- 6 Cultural Citizenship, Integration and the Representation of Muslim Minorities
- 7 Why Palestine is Central to Resolving Islam–West Relations
- 8 Civil Society and Dialogue after 9/11
- 9 Problem and Prospects of Co-existence between Nations
- Contributors
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Media Perceptions and Misperceptions: A Western Perspective
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Foreword
- Introduction: Islam and the West: A Civilized Dialogue
- 1 The Andalusian Model and Muslim–Christian Dialogue Today
- 2 The Muslim Perspective on Western Attitudes to Islamic Unity
- 3 Islam and the West: Theoretical Confusion
- 4 Western Media from the Viewpoint of the Islamic World
- 5 Media Perceptions and Misperceptions: A Western Perspective
- 6 Cultural Citizenship, Integration and the Representation of Muslim Minorities
- 7 Why Palestine is Central to Resolving Islam–West Relations
- 8 Civil Society and Dialogue after 9/11
- 9 Problem and Prospects of Co-existence between Nations
- Contributors
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Images of Islam matter a great deal in US culture and in US–Middle East relations. Unquestionably, modern film, television, news media, literature and visual culture all offer perceptions of the Middle East. The images they produce are varied although it is clear that the history of representing Islam is hardly salutary. After 9/11 the intensity of American fascination with Islam increased dramatically, as did the number – and the diversity – of US representations. One simple but fundamental argument of this essay is that these media images do not operate in simple or one-dimensional fashion. We cannot understand the impact of the media by cataloguing stereotypes or by assessing how many “negative” or “positive” images appear in the media. Instead, we can learn more about the role of culture when we ask how perceptions of Islam work in the United States, for whom and to what end.
There is not, of course, just one “Western” culture, just as there is no one Islam and no single set of images that can capture the diversity of the Muslim World. Even if we just focus on the United States, as I will in this essay, we are immediately confronted with the reality that there are multiple communities with quite different investments—from Hollywood filmmakers to small town preachers to news show pundits to undergraduate majors in Middle Eastern studies. In recent years Muslim Americans have become self-consciously involved in attempting to shape perceptions, producing literature and scholarship and commenting in the news media.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Islam and the WestA Civilized Dialogue, pp. 107 - 124Publisher: Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and ResearchPrint publication year: 2012