Archive for 'Image'
Foreign Reactions to US Anti-Muslim Events, Part II: Qur’an Burning Day
by Steven R. Corman, Jeffry R. Halverson, and Chris Lundry This is the second of a four-part series of posts on foreign reactions to recent anti-Muslim rhetoric in the U.S. In Part I we looked at the Park51 project, also known as the “Ground Zero Mosque,” and found concern over growing anti-Muslim sentiment in the U.S. There [...]
Posted: September 8th, 2010 under Analysis, Image, Indonesia, Islam, Media, Narrative, Politics, Religion, Southeast Asia.
Comments: 1
Foreign Reaction to US Anti-Muslim Events, Part I: Ground-Zero Mosque
by Steven R. Corman, Jeffry R. Halverson, and Chris Lundry Recent weeks have seen an uptick in anti-Muslim events and associated rhetoric in the U.S. Controversies include: The Park51 project in New York, popularly known as the “Ground Zero Mosque” The International Burn a Quran Day being planned for 9/11 by the Dove World Outreach [...]
Posted: September 7th, 2010 under Analysis, Image, Islam, Media, Politics.
Comments: 1
Mosque Controversy Widens Say-Do Gap
by Jeffry R. Halverson In the aftermath of the September 11th attacks, Indian novelist and activist Arundhati Roy wrote an opinion piece in the British daily The Guardian, stating: [Bin Laden] has been sculpted from the spare rib of a world laid to waste by American foreign policy: its gunboat diplomacy, its nuclear arsenal, its [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2010 under Analysis, bin Laden, Bush, Framing, Image, Islam, Narrative, Obama.
Comments: 3
Hip-Hop Ambassadors Wanted
by Jeffry R. Halverson Apparently I wasn’t the only one thinking about the diplomatic potential of Muslim hip-hop when I posted a blog about it for COMOPS Journal back in September of 2009. Recently we heard from Tyson Amir, one of the Muslim artists that I featured in the blog, and he had some interesting [...]
Posted: May 7th, 2010 under Counterterrorism, Diplomacy, Government, Image, Islam, Media, Popular Culture, Religion, State Dept..
Comments: 2
The Narrative Gap in the New PD Strategy
by Steven R. Corman A new “strategic framework” for U.S. Public Diplomacy has at long last been released. Oddly, it is a slide show rather than a paper, but perhaps that’s because it is to be the basis for a briefing today. My colleague Phil Seib has already expressed disappointment in the new proposal: It is [...]
Posted: March 10th, 2010 under Complexity, Diplomacy, Image, Narrative, Sensemaking, State Dept., Strategic Comm..
Comments: 2
How Natalie Portman and Johnny Depp Can Save the World
by Jeff Halverson In the war of ideas for the “hearts and minds” of the Muslim world, cultural diplomacy can go a long way. The US government may not be very popular abroad, but our cultural products certainly are. Many Muslims hate our policies, but they still love our movies, listen to our pop music, [...]
Posted: March 2nd, 2010 under Analysis, Counterterrorism, Diplomacy, Education, Image, Islam, Media, Popular Culture, State Dept., Strategic Comm..
Comments: 2
Let’s Amplify Extremist Contradictions
by Steven R. Corman Yesterday the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) released a report on civilian casualties in Afghanistan over the last year. It concluded that “2009 proved to be the deadliest year yet for civilians since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001.” The surprise is what it says about the [...]
Posted: January 14th, 2010 under Afghanistan, Image, Pakistan, Sensemaking, Strategic Comm..
Comments: 1
Why “Moderate Islam” is the Wrong Language
by Mark Woodward* The terminology used in English and other European languages to discuss Islam, and especially Muslim political movements, shifts constantly. There is a general consensus, shared by many in the Muslim world, that “radical” and “extremist” are appropriately characterize individuals and movements that advocate and/or employ violence to accomplish their political ends. Beyond [...]
Posted: December 12th, 2009 under Analysis, Image, Islam, Language, Media.
Comments: 6
Why is Friedman So Mystified?
by Steven R. Corman Last Friday, Thomas Friedman published and op-ed in the New York Times entitled America vs. The Narrative in which he expressed bewilderment/exasperation that the anti-U.S narrative is getting so much traction in the Muslim world: Yes, after two decades in which U.S. foreign policy has been largely dedicated to rescuing Muslims [...]
Posted: December 1st, 2009 under Image, Narrative, Sensemaking.
Comments: 5
The More They Know the Less They Like
by Steven R. Corman I just ran across this interesting release from Gallup. It cross-analyzes data from Gallup’s Communications Index “which measures the extent to which respondents are connected via electronic communications” and approval of U.S. leadership. The results are not too encouraging. Basically, the more wired the respondents are, the less inclined they are [...]
Posted: April 19th, 2009 under Image, technology.
Comments: 1