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Western Media Fraud in the Middle East
Too many journalists report official narratives of the powerful, missing the stories of working class people.
Too often, you consumers of mainstream media are victims of a fraud. You think you can trust the articles you read - why wouldn't you? You think you can sift through the ideological bias and just get the facts. But you don't know the ingredients that go into the product you buy. It is important to understand how knowledge about current events in the Middle East is produced before relying on it. Even when there are no apparent ideological biases, such as those one often sees when it comes to reporting about Israel, there are fundamental problems at the epistemological and methodological level. These create distortions, falsehoods and justify the narrative of those with power.
In discussing the manners in which the Western intelligentsia and media depict the Middle East, the French intellectual and scholar Francois Burgat complained that two main types of intellectuals tasked with explaining the "other" to Westerners dominate. Firstly, there is what he and Bourdieu, another philosopher, describe as the "negative intellectual" who aligns his beliefs and priorities with those of the state, and centres his perspective on serving the interests of power and gaining proximity to it. And secondly, there is what Burgat terms as "the facade intellectual", whose role in society is to confirm Western audiences with their already-held notions, beliefs, preconceptions, and racisms regarding the "other". Journalists writing for the mainstream media, as well as their local interlocutors, often fall into both categories.
A vast literature exists on the impossibility of journalism in its classic, liberal sense with all the familiar tropes on objectivity, neutrality, and "transmitting reality". However, and perhaps out of a lack of an alternative source of legitimation, major mainstream media outlets in the West continue to grasp to these notions with ever more insistence. The Middle East is an exceptionally suitable place for the Western media to learn about itself and its future, because it is the scene where all pretentions of objectivity, neutrality towards power, and critical engagement have faltered spectacularly.
Framing the 'other'
Journalists are the archetype of ideological tools who create culture and produce knowledge. Their function is to represent a class and perpetuate the dominant ideology instead of building a counter hegemonic and revolutionary ideology, or narrative, in this case. They are the organic intellectuals of the ruling class. Instead of being the voice of the people or the working class, journalists are too often the functional tools for a bourgeois ruling class. They produce and disseminate culture and meaning for the system and reproduce its values, allowing it to hegemonise the field of culture and since journalism today has a specific political economy, they are all products of the hegemonic discourse and the moneyed class.
The working class has no networks, that applies too to Hollywood and television entertainment and series; it is all the same intellectuals producing them. Even journalists with pretentions of being serious usually only serve elites and ignore social movements. Journalism tends to be state centric, focusing on elections, institutions, formal politics and overlooking politics of contention, informal politics, social movements.
Those with reputations as brave war reporters who hop around the world, parachuting into conflicts from Yemen to Afghanistan, typically only confirm Americans' views of the world. Journalism simplifies, which means it de-historicises. Journalism in the Middle East is too often a violent act of representation. Western journalists take reality and amputate it, contort it, and fit it into a predetermined discourse or taxonomy.
The American media always want to fit events in the region into an American narrative. The recent assassination of Osama bin Laden was greeted with a collective shrug of the shoulder in the Middle East, where he had always been irrelevant, but for Americans and hence for the American media it was a historic and defining moment which changed everything. Too often contact with the West has defined events in the Middle East, but the so-called Arab Spring with its revolutions and upheavals evokes anxiety among white Americans. They are unsettled with the autogenetic liberation of brown people. However, the Arab Spring may represent a revolutionary transformation of the Arab world, a massive blow to Islamist politics and the renaissance of secular and leftist Arab nationalist politics.
But the American media has been obsessed with Islamists, looking for them behind every demonstration, and the uprisings have been often treated as if they were something threatening. And all too often, it just comes down to "what does this mean for Israel's security?" The aspirations of hundreds of millions of freedom-seeking Arabs are subordinated to the security concerns of five million Jews who colonised Palestine.
There is a strong element of chauvinism and racism behind the reporting. Like American soldiers, American journalists like to use the occasional local word to show they have unlocked the mysteries of the culture. 'Wasta' is one such word. One American bureau chief in Iraq told me that Muqtada al-Sadr had a lot of wasta now so he could prevent a long American presence. 'Inshallah' is another such word. And in Afghanistan it's 'pushtunwali', the secret to understanding Afghans. Islam is also treated like a code that can be unlocked, and then locals can be understood as if they are programmed only through Islam.
Arab culture and Islam are spoken of the way race was once spoken of in India and Africa, and it is difficult to portray Arabs and Muslims as the good guys unless they are "like us" as in Google executives and other elites who speak English, dress trendy and use Facebook. So they are made to represent the revolutions while the poor, the workers, the subalterns, the majority who don't even have internet access let alone twitter accounts, are ignored. And in order to make the revolutions in Tunisia and especially Egypt seem non-threatening, the nonviolent tactics are emphasised while the many acts of violent resistance to regime oppression are completely ignored. This is not just the journalists' fault. It is driven by American discourse which drives the editors back in New York and Washington.
Read the full article at Al-Jazeera.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllBrilliant piece by Rosen.
My favorite quote is this (and I think it deserves repeating):
"Journalists are the archetype of ideological tools who create culture and produce knowledge. Their function is to represent a class and perpetuate the dominant ideology instead of building a counter hegemonic and revolutionary ideology, or narrative, in this case. They are the organic intellectuals of the ruling class. Instead of being the voice of the people or the working class, journalists are too often the functional tools for a bourgeois ruling class."
The basis of this argument explains why so many in Amerika prove clueless about the flaws in their nation's foreign (as well as domestic) policies.
Quite true, I think this line says a lot to:
"Journalism simplifies, which means it de-historicises."
They count on us knowing nothing of history, not being able to find Iraq or Afghanistan on a map, being "clueless", etc... That way they can create justification in a vacuum.
I concur. This is a great piece.
As a young man I studied media culture and was made aware of the ways we are all meant to be manipulated by it. I also attended Catholic schools and could easily see that what we were told to do and what most actually did was a big joke.
It never to this day ceases to amaze me that most still can not tell they are being fooled and lied to 24/7. All lies all of the time for the sake of empire . . . and look where it has gotten us - The Greatest Country in The World. Uh huh.
Does anyone remember that both Liberals and Conservatives, class ideologues, cheered the lies, into the Iraq War. The Liberal Press was god awful, where the NEW YORK TIMES, WASHINGTON POST were war hawks, liars and ideological thugs. Some of it was up front but a lot of it was hidden in the ZIONIST journalists, like JUDITH MILLER, who war mongered for Israel as well as the West and the pro Zionist ideological thugs that make up the whole Western Press. Later, the so called liberal NEW YORK TIMES was forced to do a WEAK, MEA CULPA, about the lies of our government, which they peddled, and the lies of JUDIITH MILLER, who never explained her warmongering lying propaganda, in terms of her ZIONIST, ISRAELI BIASES........
Then there was the TRULY , AWFUL PROPAGANDA, parroted Israeli propaganda, by the WESTERN PRESS on the murder of the 9 Gaza flotilla aid internationals, who MADE NO EFFORT TO GET THE STORY FROM THE PEOPLE WHO WERE ON THE SHIP, like the 19 year old American kid who was executed by ISRAELI FASCISTS, COMMANDOS, attacking a ship in international waters, PIRACY, and the WESTERN PRESS , INSTEAD, SAID SIEG HEIL TO ISRAEL!! AND ITS PROPAGANDA, LIES, WHICH WERE ALL EXPOSED , AFTER THE FALSE FACTS.
Does NO ONE remember that Nir Rosen is the reporter who "tweeted" -- ""Lara Logan had to outdo Anderson [Cooper]. Yes yes its wrong what happened to her. Of course. I don't support that. But, it would have been funny if it happened to Anderson, too" -- referring to Anderson Cooper being punched, etc. when he was in Egypt. To infer that it would have been funny if Anderson Cooper had been raped is in VERY BAD taste.
Nir Rosen later added, "jesus christ, at a moment when she [Lara] is going to become a martyr and glorified we should at least remember her role as a major war monger" and "look, she was probably groped like thousands of other women, which is still wrong, but if it was worse than i'm sorry." But it wasn't long before he backtracked, at first not sounding entirely sincere ("ah f*** it, i apologize for being insensitive, its always wrong, thats obvious, but i'm rolling my eyes at all the attention she will get") before realizing, in his own words, that "twitter is not exactly private" and posting a lengthier apology calling his remarks "insensitive and offensive" and a "joke" that got out of hand.
If you recall, Lara Logan was gang raped in Egypt when she was trying to do her job.
http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/nir-rosen-lara-logan-twitter-controversy/
Actually, my first thought is "Nir Rosen is back"!
Is that so wrong or unthinkable?
I'm not quite sure what to make of your comment, Kay. Certainly, Rosen's heedless tweets were in "very bad taste" and deserving of censure. It was indeed especially and wrong to fire off peremptory, nasty tweets about Logan before he even knew the actual extent of the assault.
It's one thing to have contempt and disdain for corporate media infotainwhores and Establishment flacks-- Rosen wasn't wrong to despise Logan's penchant for cheerleading for the Amerikan military-- and another to express mean-spirited schadenfreude at anyone being ruthlessly assaulted.
Prior to that incident, Rosen was justly respected and well-regarded as an "alternative news" journalist and analyst, comparable to Pepe Escobar, Allan Nairn, etc. This article doesn't directly relate, or speak to, issues that directly relate to either the circumstances or issues surrounding his indefensible comments.
So I'm puzzled that you simply recount Rosen's abominable lapse without making a larger point. You seem to be suggesting that it's shocking that he's still writing, or being published on CD, and that merely reminding readers of this contretemps is sufficient.
Are you implying that Rosen should be blacklisted or shunned after that single episode of horrific stupidity, because it revealed that he's a disgusting pig? I wouldn't support that position, and frankly I would be disappointed if that's what you're suggesting.
I appreciate any clarification you may be inclined to provide. Thanks.
Yohocoma is trying to rewrite the past--Rosen said nothing in his messages about media coverage of assaults on Arab women. You are inventing context and nuance that did not exist at the time. He set out to attack a journalist he did not like, and he succeeded. His comments were mocking, snarky and and stupid.
Incidentally, Common Dreams should update his biography--Rosen resigned, in shame, from NYU as a result of the Twitter controversy.
And why anyone still considers Rosen a credible source on the Middle East is beyond me...
The same media that wouldn't dream of telling us that Ku Klux Klan Christians are representative of the religion tell us that Zionist Jews are representative of theirs. They do share white phosphorous frenzy and blood lust, which expresses the white racism they hold in common.