Red Frames on the Green Revolution: Iran Through a Lethal Media Scope

by: Cynthia Boaz, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Framing the Green Revolution in Red
Mir Hossein Mousavi supporters demonstrate in Tehran on Monday. (Photo: Getty Images)

    If the international consensus about last week's election results in Iran is that they were a) indeed fraudulent, or b) a coup attempt, and the pro-democracy elements in that country emerge victorious, it will mostly be in spite - not because - of mainstream media coverage of the events. Since 2002, there have emerged a series of democracy movements in Iran, spearheaded primarily - though not exclusively - by university students and women. These people are for the most part technologically and strategically savvy, especially when compared to the hardliners and mullahs that make up the ancient regime in Iran. They have studied the nonviolent struggles in Chile, South Africa and Serbia. They understand the dynamics of civil resistance and the power of simply withdrawing individual complicity in oppression. These are the people whose "tweets" and Facebook "status updates" the world is getting live via digital media from inside the country (despite the regime's attempts to shut down all electronic communications). They are citizen journalists in the most genuine sense of the term. And yet, for most reporters and producers in American mainstream media, they might as well not exist.

    The gap between the mainstream media's frames on the story emerging from Iran and the news being instantaneously communicated in bits and pieces from inside the country is surreal. And here's why we should care. A media "frame" helps form the cognitive structure around our perceptions of reality. It determines what parts of a news story we find most significant, and it helps us draw subconscious - but often deeply embedded - conclusions about the meaning behind the events in a story. Because media tend to be so obsessed with violence, the context and significance underlying the series of events like the ones unfolding in Iran often are misinterpreted. Because the wrong (or less interesting) but often more sensational elements of the story are emphasized while others are downplayed, erroneous or incomplete conclusions emerge. And often these conclusions have the consequence of creating a self-fulfilling prophecy. When Iranian pro-democracy activists, say, catch a glimpse of a CNN streaming headline that says something to the effect of "Ahmadinejad Victorious in Iranian Elections" or that refer to Mousavi as "the defeated challenger," they may conclude that the regime's attempt at (what is appearing more and more obviously to be) a coup has succeeded. This will in turn dampen their enthusiasm and morale, which may cause some in the movement to give up their resistance, and worse, may cause others to turn to violent means - a last, desperate resort - to fight back.

    Although occasionally media frames are consciously manufactured (witness virtually anything on the Fox News channel), conventional wisdom suggests that the major culprit is the inability or unwillingness of reporters to engage in serious investigative or assiduous on-the-ground reporting. For example, when in doubt - where information is sparse or of questionable veracity, and official (government) forces are being challenged by nongovernmental forces, media tend to default to the perspective of the officials, regardless of regime type or ideology (W. Lance Bennett calls this the "authority-disorder" bias). This can be extraordinarily frustrating for members of a nonviolent pro-democracy struggle, who, in addition to everything else, find themselves in the midst of an uprising having to try to unspin erroneous media coverage coming from all directions.

    Other types of media bias that help shape public perceptions of civil resistance - and all of which are being used to report the story from Iran - are fragmentation, dramatization and euphemism.

    The fragmentation bias involves covering the story in isolated, seemingly unrelated pieces. At its worst, a story is completely removed of its larger historical or political context. As they are being reported now by most mainstream media, stories from Iran are fragmented. They suggest pandemonium, isolated acts of extremist political violence and a regime struggling to "normalize" the situation. When taken together (and especially with the corresponding photographs), these smaller stories paint a picture of a country in chaos, prone to violent theocratic extremism and awash in repression. While each of these taken out of context may have some veracity, the reality is much richer and more potentially encouraging. The Green Revolution is not just a series of ad hoc protests against a political theft, it is a story of widespread resistance to ongoing oppression. It is not the repression and violence that is most interesting about the news coming from Iran, it is that people continue to resist despite the repression.

green

    Stories coming from Iran in the last few days are also characterized by what Bennett calls the dramatization bias. Dramatization of a story occurs when the news is encapsulated in short, sensationalistic bits intended to provoke an emotional response on the part of the news consumer, but in the absence of serious analysis of the policy issues, institutional interplay or larger social setting. Dramatization, which thrives on confusion and skepticism, tends to produce conclusions that bend toward the cynical. For example, a dramatization bias might cover a massive protest against rigged votes as a "spontaneous mass uprising," suggesting that it is not part of a larger, systematic strategy and leading the media audience to conclude it's a one-off - just a temporary and reflexive response to immediate political events. This kind of conclusion could create the global perception that there is nothing - no movement or struggle - with which to demonstrate solidarity.

crowd

    Finally, the use of euphemism plays a dangerous role in the way civil resistance is covered, especially when the resistance takes place in a non-Western country. The terminology used to describe the images of thousands of people on the streets often (erroneously) connotes improvised and anarchic action, when in fact, most of the movement itself (though not necessarily the regime opponent) may be strategic, organized and disciplined. For example, a headline next to a photo of a massive demonstration in Tehran on the MSNBC web site as of this writing simply says "Huge crowds in Iran," a statement which, while technically correct, is incomplete. A "crowd" connotes any large group of people congregated together for no specific reason. What is happening on the streets of Iran is much more sophisticated than a convergence of "crowds." It is a massive, nonviolent, civilian uprising that everyone (including Ahmadinejad and his supporters in the Guardian Council) - save most of the American mainstream media - seems to take seriously as a potential force for real change in Iran.

    The Iran news story is not yet a story about successful repression, much less the apparent clear-cut preference of Iranians for theocratic autocracy. It's about courageous, massive resistance to an attempted coup, and responsible democratic media would do well to recognize - and report - it that way, both on behalf of those who are resisting and those who are observing.

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Cynthia Boaz, Ph.D., is assistant professor of political science at Sonoma State University, where she specializes in nonviolent movements and quality of democracy. She is vice president of the Metta Center for Nonviolence and is on the board of directors of Project Censored/Media Freedom Foundation.


Comments

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This article does an

This article does an excellent job pointing out the real and powerful consequences of media frames and the institutional practices that promote them.

I would love to see more work among progressives to challenge the structures of mass media with cutting-edge insights into the political mind. This is something my colleagues and I are working on as part of our mission to build a politics that works in the 21st Century.

Best,

Joe Brewer

Founder, Cognitive Policy Works

http://www.cognitivepolicyworks.com


Even using 'framing' puts it

Even using 'framing' puts it in the wrong context. The reporters need only to try for accuracy, 'crowds' means anything, thus nothing, it's lazy, 'popular uprising' is what is actually happening, from a fearless population that is more than skeptical that the official vote count was honest. Our media is lazy, and/or fearful that they'll be the first to say something true and get beat up for it. This is what complacent free speech brings on, self-censorship and group-think. One does need to refresh ones democracy from time to time?


A thoughtful analysis, but

A thoughtful analysis, but CNN reports have been assiduous in their compliments to the technologically savvy citizen journalists who are getting the footage out.


Dan Rather addressed the

Dan Rather addressed the National Press Club some time ago on the shifted role of the reporter from the independent investigative being to a pawn of the media mongols. This article begs the question; if we are the beacon of liberty then when will we rise to the occasion? Michael Furman Washington, DC


Not one word about who is

Not one word about who is "supporting" this uprising. Not one word that is most likely the USofA itself, who bitches and moans about anyone else meddling in foreign elections, but sees no problem when we do it. Why? Why would anyone in their right mind WANT to do business with this country? All this country will do is extract the natural resources from that country and pay one or two people an exuberant amount of money(several million while we extract billions!) for it. The people, the populace, will undoubtedly suffer. And once again, only a few will reap the benefits of many, many sweaty backs. Oh, one more thing. You think this is by accident - "A media "frame" helps form the cognitive structure around our perceptions of reality. It determines what parts of a news story we find most significant, and it helps us draw subconscious - but often deeply embedded - conclusions about the meaning behind the events in a story."


I am deeply interested in

I am deeply interested in this story and have been following its evolution for weeks through mainstream news media, excluding Fox. I have come to same conclusions as this writer about what is happening in Iran -- thanks to perceptive coverage. Unfortunately, I think the critic here may suffer from some of the same framing and stereotypical thinking problems she accuses journalists of using.


the images of a mostly

the images of a mostly silent, peaceful procession are eerie and surreal when placed alongside the abovementioned "dramatized" versions being pushed by major broadcasters. i am riveted by the stark contrast between the narrative manufactured for an immediate, though hollow, emotional reaction and the one that unfolds like a lotus in the mind. the latter (respectfully) lays no claim to my thoughts and feelings; it is simply There, like a seed that could sprout while i am washing dishes. good journalism should not have to compete for space on national news with the accidental flushing of a puppy. but i am not a passive viewer. yes, lazy reporting is maddening and wide-spread, but i have clearly found better sources. thanks, t r u t h o u t, your efforts are valued!! keep up the fight.


excellent article, thank you!

excellent article, thank you!


This good article fails

This good article fails though to render the prevailing attitude of most Iranians (and non-westerners)in that ANY news from the west (CNN,MSNBC,BBC...) is considered circumspect and bias. They take it with quite a truck load of salt. The communication and shaping of the events in Theran,Bushehr, Khorastan and elsewhere is generated totally by an Irano-Iranian structure that only glances at outside media more as a confirmation that it is registering rather than how it is perceived.


I see CIA written all over

I see CIA written all over this. This is one of the most overt covert operations in a long time.


Boas should have written in

Boas should have written in this sentence "Since 2002, there have emerged a series of democracy movements in Iran, spearheaded primarily - though not exclusively - by university students and women" that the series of so-called (i.e., called in American dominated media) democracy movements were spearheaded by the NED and the Open Society Foundation. Congress appropirated $400 million to destabilize and change political conditions in Iran and we are seeing the result. US managed web social networking sites are key in organiznig in Iran. This is not a democracy movement we are seeing but rather neo-colonialism at its finest. Mousavi lost because he was known to be a US puppet. There are not enough stupid people in Iran to elect him -- as there apparently are in the US.


Good article on

Good article on Institutional Media. Journalist like me aiming to relay all sides of events are using Twitter. Not only to report the voices of the people but to highlights the disconnect between mass TV and realities.


Why is it that whenever

Why is it that whenever anyone stands up to the status quo it is associated with leftist movements. The Irianian people just don't want to be used as cannon fodder anymore. Please, let's not make this another failed socialist/communists movement.


The media have their own

The media have their own gender in lran which is having democracy everywhere in the world just like communism.


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