Social Movement Framing Tasks and Contemporary Racisms: Diagnostic and Prognostic Forms

被引:6
|
作者
Smith, Wade P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Eastern Illinois Univ, 600 Lincoln Ave, Charleston, IL 61920 USA
关键词
racism; racial inequality; social movements; social problems; framing; COLLECTIVE ACTION; RIGHTS; REFLECTIONS; WHITE; RACE; RESONANCE;
D O I
10.1177/2332649220922564
中图分类号
C95 [民族学、文化人类学];
学科分类号
0304 ; 030401 ;
摘要
Increasingly, race scholars define racism as a structural and systemic phenomenon, rather than a matter of personal prejudice alone. Various theories of racism have been developed by asking "What causes racial inequality?" and defining as racist those mechanisms that reproduce it. In this essay. I ask a different question to expand the toolkit from which scholars can identify the racisms that characterize the contemporary era. Acknowledging that dramatic changes to systems of racial oppression are historically brought about by social movements, I ask, "What causes anti-racist movements to fail?" and define as racist those factors that prevent anti-racist movements from mobilizing supporters in the pursuit of change. I thus propose, define, and describe two forms of racism that connect theories of race and racism to theories of social movements. To enable success, social movements engage in (among other tasks) diagnostic and prognostic framing-that is, they identify conditions as problems and propose solutions. I thus propose the following forms of racism that manifest as sentiments that prevent anti-racist movements from successfully carrying out these tasks: diagnostic racism and prognostic racism. In conclusion, I explain how this conceptualization of racism complements and extends prevailing theories of race and racism and underscores the utility of bridging theories of race and racism and social movement theories in studies of race relations.
引用
收藏
页码:194 / 207
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [42] Transforming a Concept in a Tool: Diagnostic and Prognostic Value of Tasks Depleting Cognitive Resources
    Saccani, Maria Silvia
    Contemori, Giulio
    Corolli, Chiara
    Bonato, Mario
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 12
  • [43] An Islamic social movement in contemporary West Africa: NASFAT of Nigeria
    Soares, Benjamin
    MOVERS AND SHAKERS: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS IN AFRICA, 2009, 8 : 178 - 196
  • [44] Role of multimodality imaging in infective endocarditis: Contemporary diagnostic and prognostic considerations
    Xu, Bo
    Sanaka, Krishna O.
    Haq, Ikram-Ul
    Reyaldeen, Reza M.
    Kocyigit, Duygu
    Pettersson, Gosta B.
    Unai, Shinya
    Cremer, Paul
    Grimm, Richard A.
    Griffin, Brian P.
    PROGRESS IN CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES, 2023, 81 : 78 - 88
  • [45] Three forms of professional capital: systemic, social movement, and activist
    Shirley, Dennis
    JOURNAL OF PROFESSIONAL CAPITAL AND COMMUNITY, 2016, 1 (04) : 302 - 320
  • [47] Demanding Disaster Justice: Social Movement Framing and Mobilization after Super Typhoon Yolanda
    Yee, Dakila Kim P.
    PHILIPPINE STUDIES-HISTORICAL AND ETHNOGRAPHIC VIEWPOINTS, 2023, 71 (04) : 467 - 493
  • [48] The art of social movement: Cultural opportunity, mobilisation, and framing in the early formation of the Amber Collective
    Hollands, Robert
    Vail, John
    POETICS, 2012, 40 (01) : 22 - 43
  • [49] Conflicting diagnostic and prognostic framing of epidemics? Newspaper representations of dengue as a public health problem in Peru
    Espinoza, Maria I.
    SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2021, 289
  • [50] How to Discredit a Social Movement: Negative Framing of "Idle No More" in Canadian Print Media
    Chen, Sibo
    ENVIRONMENTAL COMMUNICATION-A JOURNAL OF NATURE AND CULTURE, 2019, 13 (02): : 144 - 151