{"title":"Destabilizing Race in Political Communication: Social Movements as Sites of Political Imagination","authors":"Rohan Grover, Rachel Kuo","doi":"10.1080/10584609.2023.2198986","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT How do social movement actors use consciousness-raising communicative practices to reconfigure political understandings of race? And how can such practices shape the analysis of political communication? We explore these questions by drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, semi-structured interviews, and archival materials to examine two case studies: an historical example of Grace Lee Boggs’ structural guidelines for creating a revolutionary study group in the Asian Political Alliance and a contemporary example of Equality Labs’ anti-caste political organizing by engaging across racial and caste social hierarchies. These cases illustrate the analytic value of engaging alternative theoretical frameworks of race and politics from critical ethnic studies, feminist of color scholarship, and social movements as rich sites of political theory through cultivating political consciousness in service of radical political imaginations. This article offers two main contributions to the field of political communication. First, by looking at the creative work of racial theorizing within social movements, we destabilize the limits of race as a demographic category. Second, we demonstrate the analytic value of studying political education and consciousness-raising as communicative practices that emphasize relational reconfigurations of race. This article recasts racial political discourse from public opinion and campaign messaging measured quantitatively to political imaginations that must be interpreted within historical and material contexts. As our cases demonstrate, centering the shifting category of race within movement building opens up the field of political communication to the communicative processes of consciousness-building and also offers dynamic understandings of race and racialization.","PeriodicalId":20264,"journal":{"name":"Political Communication","volume":"40 1","pages":"484 - 503"},"PeriodicalIF":4.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Political Communication","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/10584609.2023.2198986","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"COMMUNICATION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
ABSTRACT How do social movement actors use consciousness-raising communicative practices to reconfigure political understandings of race? And how can such practices shape the analysis of political communication? We explore these questions by drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, semi-structured interviews, and archival materials to examine two case studies: an historical example of Grace Lee Boggs’ structural guidelines for creating a revolutionary study group in the Asian Political Alliance and a contemporary example of Equality Labs’ anti-caste political organizing by engaging across racial and caste social hierarchies. These cases illustrate the analytic value of engaging alternative theoretical frameworks of race and politics from critical ethnic studies, feminist of color scholarship, and social movements as rich sites of political theory through cultivating political consciousness in service of radical political imaginations. This article offers two main contributions to the field of political communication. First, by looking at the creative work of racial theorizing within social movements, we destabilize the limits of race as a demographic category. Second, we demonstrate the analytic value of studying political education and consciousness-raising as communicative practices that emphasize relational reconfigurations of race. This article recasts racial political discourse from public opinion and campaign messaging measured quantitatively to political imaginations that must be interpreted within historical and material contexts. As our cases demonstrate, centering the shifting category of race within movement building opens up the field of political communication to the communicative processes of consciousness-building and also offers dynamic understandings of race and racialization.
摘要:社会运动参与者如何利用提高意识的交流实践来重新配置对种族的政治理解?这种做法如何影响对政治传播的分析?我们通过民族志田野调查、半结构化访谈、,以及档案材料,以审查两个案例研究:一个是Grace Lee Boggs在亚洲政治联盟中创建革命研究小组的结构指导方针的历史例子,另一个是平等实验室通过跨种族和种姓社会等级参与反种姓政治组织的当代例子。这些案例说明了通过培养为激进政治想象服务的政治意识,将批判性种族研究、有色人种女权主义学术和社会运动中的种族和政治替代理论框架作为丰富的政治理论场所的分析价值。这篇文章为政治传播领域提供了两个主要贡献。首先,通过观察社会运动中种族理论的创造性工作,我们破坏了种族作为一个人口类别的局限性。其次,我们展示了研究政治教育和意识培养作为强调种族关系重构的交际实践的分析价值。本文将种族政治话语从定量衡量的公众舆论和竞选信息重塑为必须在历史和物质背景下解释的政治想象。正如我们的案例所表明的那样,在运动建设中以不断变化的种族类别为中心,为意识建设的沟通过程开辟了政治沟通领域,也提供了对种族和种族化的动态理解。
期刊介绍:
Political Communication is a quarterly international journal showcasing state-of-the-art, theory-driven empirical research at the nexus of politics and communication. Its broad scope addresses swiftly evolving dynamics and urgent policy considerations globally. The journal embraces diverse research methodologies and analytical perspectives aimed at advancing comprehension of political communication practices, processes, content, effects, and policy implications. Regular symposium issues delve deeply into key thematic areas.