Destabilizing Race in Political Communication: Social Movements as Sites of Political Imagination

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.

[1]  Esmeralda Arrizón-Palomera We were there: The Third World Women’s Alliance and the second wave , 2022, Latino Studies.

[2]  C. Steele Digital Black Feminism , 2021 .

[3]  D. Lane,et al.  Testing Inequality and Identity Accounts of Racial Gaps in Political Expression on Social Media , 2021, Political Communication.

[4]  Sarah J. Jackson,et al.  The disavowal of race in communication theory , 2020 .

[5]  Sarah J. Jackson,et al.  #HashtagActivism: Networks of Race and Gender Justice , 2020 .

[6]  To Turn the Whole World Over , 2019 .

[7]  Sarah Sobieraj Audiences in social context: bridging the divides between political communications and social movements scholarship† , 2019, Information, Communication & Society.

[8]  D. Karpf Symposium on political communication and social movements – the campfire and the tent: what social movement studies and political communication can learn from one another , 2019, Information, Communication & Society.

[9]  Gül Çalışkan,et al.  From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation , 2018, Ethnic and Racial Studies.

[10]  R. Nielsen No One Cares What We Know: Three Responsesto the Irrelevance of Political Communication Research , 2018 .

[11]  E. Taketani,et al.  THE INTIMACIES OF FOUR CONTINENTS , 2016 .

[12]  M. Sen,et al.  Race as a Bundle of Sticks: Designs that Estimate Effects of Seemingly Immutable Characteristics , 2016 .

[13]  G. K. Hong Death beyond Disavowal: The Impossible Politics of Difference , 2015 .

[14]  R. Frazier The East Is Black: Cold War China in the Black Radical Imagination , 2014 .

[15]  J. Klugman,et al.  Freedom from Violence , 2014 .

[16]  Aimé Césaire,et al.  Discourse on Colonialism , 2014 .

[17]  Dina G. Okamoto Asian American Political Participation: Emerging Constituents and Their Political Identities , 2014 .

[18]  R. Lakhtakia Ships Passing in the Night: , 2014, Journal of Cancer Education.

[19]  T. Prentki,et al.  Choosing the Margin as a Space of Radical Openness , 2013 .

[20]  W. Martin,et al.  From Toussaint to Tupac: The Black International since the Age of Revolution , 2012 .

[21]  Chandan Reddy Freedom with Violence: Race, Sexuality, and the US State , 2011 .

[22]  Christopher T. Stout Race Appeal: How Candidates Invoke Race in U.S. Political Campaigns. By Charlton D. McIlwain and Stephen M. Caliendo. (Temple University Press, 2011) , 2011 .

[23]  Charlton D. McIlwain,et al.  Race Appeal: How Candidates Invoke Race in U.S. Political Campaigns , 2011 .

[24]  W. Bennett,et al.  A New Era of Minimal Effects? The Changing Foundations of Political Communication , 2008 .

[25]  E. Bonilla-Silva,et al.  White Logic, White Methods: Racism and Methodology , 2008 .

[26]  Mary C. Ellison Black is a Country: race and the unfinished struggle for democracy , 2006 .

[27]  N. Singh Black Is a Country , 2004 .

[28]  B. Hamm Projections of Power: Framing News, Public Opinion, and U.S. Foreign Policy , 2004 .

[29]  C. Eschle Feminism without Borders: Decolonizing Theory, Practicing Solidarity , 2004 .

[30]  S. Wynter,et al.  Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation--An Argument , 2004 .

[31]  Catherine R. Squires,et al.  Rethinking the black public sphere: An alternative vocabulary for multiple public spheres , 2002 .

[32]  D. Ryfe History and Political Communication: An Introduction , 2001 .

[33]  G. Boggs,et al.  The Continuity of Living for Change: An Interview with Grace Lee Boggs , 2001 .

[34]  Dietram A. Scheufele,et al.  Agenda-Setting, Priming, and Framing Revisited: Another Look at Cognitive Effects of Political Communication , 2000 .

[35]  Sergio Paulo Benevides,et al.  Silencing the past: power and the production of history , 1999 .

[36]  N. Painter,et al.  Scenes of Subjection: Terror, Slavery, and Self-Making in Nineteenth-Century America , 1998 .

[37]  L. Lowe,et al.  Immigrant Acts: On Asian American Cultural Politics. , 1997 .

[38]  K. S. Chauveau,et al.  Working with C++ , 1993, Proceedings of NORTHCON'93 Electrical and Electronics Convention.

[39]  C. West The New Cultural Politics of Difference , 1990, Keeping Faith.

[40]  Lawrence Grossberg,et al.  On Postmodernism and Articulation , 1986 .

[41]  Cedric J. Robinson,et al.  Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition , 1983 .

[42]  D. Shaw,et al.  Agenda setting function of mass media , 1972 .

[43]  C. James,et al.  The Black Jacobins : Toussaint L'Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution , 1940 .

[44]  Sarah J. Jackson,et al.  #HashtagActivism , 2020 .

[45]  Keisha N. Blain,et al.  To Turn the Whole World Over: Black Women and Internationalism , 2019 .

[46]  Daniel Kreiss,et al.  The Role of Qualitative Methods in Political Communication Research: Past, Present, and Future , 2015 .

[47]  Wendy H. Chun Introduction: Race and/as Technology; or, How to Do Things to Race , 2009 .

[48]  J. Helms,et al.  The meaning of race in psychology and how to change it: a methodological perspective. , 2005, The American psychologist.

[49]  D. Robinson Freedom dreams: The black radical imagination. , 2003 .

[50]  J. Hampton,et al.  The people's choice. , 2001, Plastic surgical nursing : official journal of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgical Nurses.

[51]  Jennifer Choi At the Margins of the Asian American Political Experience: The Life of Grace Lee Boggs , 1999 .

[52]  C. West The Ethical Dimensions Of Marxist Thought , 1991 .

[53]  S. Iyengar,et al.  News That Matters: Television and American Opinion , 1987 .

[54]  P. Lazarsfeld,et al.  The People's Choice: How the Voter Makes Up His Mind in a Presidential Campaign , 1968 .

[55]  L. Guest The People's Choice: How the Voter Makes Up His Mind in a Presidential Campaign. , 1946 .

[56]  W. D. Bois,et al.  Black Reconstruction in America , 1935 .