The Demonization of Islam through Social Media: A Case Study of #Stopislam in Instagram
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Social Media, Demonization, and Islam
2.1. Social Media
2.2. Demonization: Concept and Characteristics
2.3. Demonization and Its Consequences in Social Media
2.3.1. Racism
Any racialization process does not necessarily lead to the implementation of racist logic or practices, and every racialism does not necessarily result in a hierarchy of categories. At the same time, racism should not be perceived as an inevitable consequence of racialization or racialism. Racism is only a very particular derivation produced by the inclusion of an arbitrary principle of hierarchies in a previously defined distinction between human groups.
- They appear to be against discrimination, although, in practice, they resist initiatives to correct it.
- Feelings of fear and threat based on the group, considering that the State better treats minorities.
- Blaming the victim who is at a low social level, thus denying the existence of racism—for example, denying the scarcity of opportunities and over-exalting the scarcity of efforts. This point leads to two specific types of behavior: the acceptance of new norms without complete internalization and the emergence of “indirect micro-aggressions” and avoidance.
2.3.2. Islamophobia
2.3.3. Invisibility
- Marxism: especially with the concept of alienation through which human beings feel isolated or alienated from the nature to which they belong and even dominated. Invisibility is linked to this theory when people belonging to a minority group accept discrimination as something natural.
- Critical theory of the Frankfurt school: it is established that through critical analysis, the human being can free himself from oppression. According to critical theorists, every human being has a creative potential that helps him to overcome. The relationship with the concept of invisibility is that the affected person can become aware of it and cover it through the actions, turning it into a process of visibility.
- Symbolic interactionism: this theory is based on understanding the ability to think as a change process, resulting from the interaction between the person and the social environment [37]. Within this theory, it is accepted the approach of Erving Goffman (1970) [17] on the identity of the ‘I’, which holds that one acts socially following the form in which it is thought to be accepted.
- Turner’s self-categorization (1987): maintains that people do not exercise as individual beings, but as social beings who extract part of their identity from the environments they belong to. The connection between this theory and the invisibility process is that discriminated groups try to hide their most stereotyped traits, weakening their cultural identity.
- Theory of Communicative Action [59]: according to this theory, every human act is supported by a communicative action in which three types of scenarios are found: (1) the objective world (reality), (2) the social world (norms), and (3) the subjective world (experiences). These three scenarios become obstacles for discriminated groups and connect this theory with the process of invisibility, since these groups do not manage to thematize an aspect of reality (objective world) because they challenge the social world governed by the norm and controlled by the dominant elite.
- Theory of State Formation [60]: It is argued that the State is established through social fractures, resulting from the tension between center/periphery, urban/rural, secular/religious, and industrial- employers/employees, to the point of invisibility of non-dominant groups.
The analphanaut is characterized as an individual who dominates digital competencies, and they are part of their information consumption habits. However, they lack info diets and information filtering capacity in a dual way. Firstly, they receive more content than they can process cognitively, thus emerging the characteristics of informational oversaturation, infoxication, infobesity, and data smog. This situation can be identified by the number of activities they carry out in parallel through multitasking navigation, which has a direct impact on their ability to pay attention to the activities carried out in parallel online vs. offline, but also by the activities they carry out on the fourth screens during their browsing.
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Sample
3.2. Instruments
- In Scopus, the search criteria “demonization” with the Boolean algorithm AND intersection with “social media” was used. For the search refinement, a selection of emerging documents from 2010–2019 was chosen, from the Social Sciences area, document type “article”, and source type “journals”. Before the first screening, 79 documents emerged, which, after refinement, became 34.
- In the Web of Science (WoS) case, the same search criteria were used, with 83 documents appearing in the first filtering. For the refinement of the search, the period 2010–2019 was selected, only in the thematic area of the communication, document type “article”, obtaining 57 documents from this screening. A review of the literature and grounded theory was carried out with which the same epistemological, ontological, and theoretical forms would be correlated. The selection criteria (or screening criteria) for the documentary analysis were the following:
- Thematic connection: 79 documents were analyzed in Scopus and 83 in WoS, refining only those related to the study object. After this screening, 34 documents were selected in Scopus and 57 in WoS.
- The novelty of the contribution: The number of emerging citations in WoS and Scopus, within the period 2010–2019, were considered, emphasizing the most recent ones.
- By the most cited: The most cited works were considered. A total of 91 documents emerge between the two interfaces after the screening, of which only those with more than 20 citations were taken into account.
4. Results
4.1. A War between Muslims
4.2. Muslims Are Terrorists
4.3. Muslims Should Be Deported and Muslims as Rapists
4.4. Muslim Women Are a Security Threat
5. Discussion and Conclusions
5.1. RQ1: How Does Instagram Foment the Islamophobic Hate?
5.2. RQ2: How Is Instagram Used to Demonize Muslims?
5.3. RQ3: Which Are the Social Consequences of Demonization and Hate Speech?
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Available in: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.58517. |
Month | f |
---|---|
January | 51 |
February | 64 |
Mach | 41 |
April | 49 |
May | 57 |
June | 105 |
July | 107 |
Instagram Walls of Hate | Types of Engagement |
---|---|
Muslims are Terrorist | Representation of Muslims in social media as aggressive and terrorists. |
No difference is made between people who practice Islam and terrorists. | |
Muslims as Rapists | Representation of Muslim people as serial rapists and a danger to women. |
Muslim women are a security threat | Because of wearing the hijab, Muslim women are represented as a threat to national security. |
A war between Muslims | The promotion of Islamophobia by showing Muslims as war subjects serve as a tool for the extreme right to promote patriotism. |
Muslims should be deported | The idea that an invasion is taking place is used to create campaigns against Islamic law, promoting that they should be expelled because they put Western identities at risk. |
Variables | January | February | March | April | May | June | July |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Muslims are Terrorists | 16.7% | 7.5% | 12.2% | 31.4% | 16.7% | 18.3% | 18.2% |
Muslims as Rapists | 1.4% | 5.0% | 2% | 2% | 16.7% | 7.6% | 8.3% |
Muslim women are a security threat | 2.8% | 0% | 0% | 3.9% | 1.7% | 0% | 0% |
A war between Muslims | 55.6% | 63.7% | 73.5% | 58.8% | 60% | 60.3% | 68.6% |
Muslims should be deported | 23.6% | 23.8% | 12.2% | 3.9% | 5% | 13.7% | 5% |
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Civila, S.; Romero-Rodríguez, L.M.; Civila, A. The Demonization of Islam through Social Media: A Case Study of #Stopislam in Instagram. Publications 2020, 8, 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications8040052
Civila S, Romero-Rodríguez LM, Civila A. The Demonization of Islam through Social Media: A Case Study of #Stopislam in Instagram. Publications. 2020; 8(4):52. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications8040052
Chicago/Turabian StyleCivila, Sabina, Luis M. Romero-Rodríguez, and Amparo Civila. 2020. "The Demonization of Islam through Social Media: A Case Study of #Stopislam in Instagram" Publications 8, no. 4: 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications8040052
APA StyleCivila, S., Romero-Rodríguez, L. M., & Civila, A. (2020). The Demonization of Islam through Social Media: A Case Study of #Stopislam in Instagram. Publications, 8(4), 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications8040052