|
Sociology 924: Social Movements Seminar
Calendar Pamela
Oliver
Symbolic Content: Ideology, Discourse, Frames, Framing and their Critics
Updated assignment 2009: "Frame theory" became almost hegemonic for a while as a way of talking about ideas in social movements, and the majority of articles published in the area use these ideas, either uncritically or critically. (1) Overview. Read either or both of the Snow 2004 Blackwell Companion piece or the Della Porta / Diani chapter. This should get you oriented. (2) Snow et al 1986 #II-4 is the "foundational" piece that you should read as a classic. (3) One older line is "functions of ideology," the mechanisms of how ideas are important in movements, represented in section I. Snow/Benford 1988 is very widely cited for this functional trichotomy, and I think it is important to trace the ideas to their origin in Wilson's 1973 work. I think you should know this line and the history of the ideas but I don't know whether we need to discuss it in class. (4) Another line is revisiting the relation between framing as the strategic use of language to persuade and the older and larger literature on ideology. The Oliver/Johnston vs Snow/Benford exchange (which I have put a tentative * by) represents my intervention is this literature and my working definition of ideology, which I should note is NOT how most theorists of ideology think of it. You can see that the Snow work subsequent to this intervention e.g. the 2004 piece addresses issues of ideolgy and the older traditions. The Westby 2002 piece also works with these ideas in a very different way. (5) A lot of work examines the strategic dynamics of framing or discourse, considering how actors fit themselves into a discursive space and how the "framing" is affected by the flow of events and political context. I have put (*)'s by the Ferree 2003, Eillingson 1995 and Steinberg 1999 pieces as exemplars of empirical work that takes a more dynamic and strategic approach and suggest that you at least skim all of these and give a close read to at least one of them.
Other themes to focus on in the readings: 1)
what frames and framing are, 2) framing as a conscious activity by movement
activists versus unconscious sets of assumptions, 3) links to concepts
of ideology, 4) how frames connect with strategies, political opportunities,
5) alternate theoretical conceptions of discourses etc. how frames differ
from identities and other ideational concepts. I think class discussion
might be most fruitful if people tried to think about how these ideas
relate to particular movements you know something about. Click
here for key to abbreviations referring to collections -- CP, BC, MM etc.
I. Consensus mobilization & general discussions
of functions of ideology
An older tradition, exemplified by John Wilson's 1973 textbook, outlined the functions of ideology: diagnosis (what is the problem), prognosis (what is the cause), call to action. These ideas were picked up and repacked with other concepts by Klandermans in "consensus mobilization" and Snow/Benford in "framing tasks." Later scholars cited Snow/Benford for the three-pronged "tasks" idea, not its originator, John Wilson. If you are interested in digging seriously into this area, I think it is worth taking a good look at the relation among these different ways of trying to theorize the same idea, as well as considering whether Wilson's ideas were improved or just repackaged.
- John Wilson, Social Movements (1973): Chapter 3, "Mobilization
of Discontent." A direct influence on the Klandermans concept of
consensus mobilization and on Snow & Benford's 1988 discussion of
framing tasks. 1) PDF file (portrait) 3.5MB Will appear sideways on the screen. Will
print out OK 2) PDF
file (landscape) 3.5 MB will appear OK on screen but may print improperly
depending on settings.
- David Snow and Robert Benford. 1988. "Ideology, Frame Resonance,
and Participant Mobilization." International Social Movement Research
1: 197-217. framing tasks and constraints on framing. Nice review of
analytic dimensions of ideology. Note that the analytic dimensions of
ideology is taken from John Wilson's 1973 Social Movements text, see above. PDF
- Bert Klandermans. 1988. "The Formation and Mobilization of Consensus."
International Social Movement Research 1: 173-196. [cites Kriesi 1986
that NSM are rooted in dense counter-cultural networks and thus can
have loose structures. cf CRM] consensus mobilization is the creation
of shared views of movement issues (vs action mobilization to act).
Wide-ranging review of functionalist requirements for content of ideologies
(building on Wilson) as well as sources of communication and credibility. Example of decline in
opinion after counter-campaign. Useful overview. PDF
II. Frames & Framing
- (*) Chapter 3. "The Symbolic Dimension of Collective Action."
Social Movements : An Introduction. Donatella Della Porta and Mario
Diani. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers. 2006. Postmaterialism, cognitive
praxis, interpretive frames. Discussion of frame theory as cognitive
praxis.
- * Snow, David A. (2004). Framing Processes, Ideology and Discursive Fields. The Blackwell Companion to Social Movements. D. A. Snow, S. A. Soule and H. Kriesi. Malden, MA and Oxford, UK, Blackwell Publishing: 380-412.
Historical view that picks up older critiques of concept of ideology. Digs into ideas of ideology and framing. Summary of framing literature: distinguishing collective action frames from everyday frames. Empirical work and theoretical elaborations: frames as properties of organizations, master frames, frames and independent and dependent, frame transformations. Connecting ideology, frames, discursive fields: problematizing ideology, discursive process of frame articulation and elaboration, discursive fields and opportunity structures
- *David Snow et al., "Frame Alignment Processes," ASR 51
(1986): 464-481. The first and most influential piece: movement actors
try to bring their movement's frame into alignment with other's ideas
so that they will join or support the movement. in MS & BC. Also
JSTOR.
- Robert Benford and David Snow. Framing Processes and Social Movements:
An Overview and Assessment. Annual Review of Sociology, 2000, 26, 611-639.
Reviews scholarship on collective action frames & framing processes
in relation to social movements, with focus on the analytic utility
of this literature for understanding social movement dynamics. An attempt
is made to provide clarification of the linkages between framing concepts/processes
& other conceptual & theoretical formulations relevant to social
movements, eg, schemas & ideology. An excellent recent review. It
is also very dense. I suggest reading it over lightly to understand
the terrain it covers, and then keeping it as a reference for later
review. PDF file
- (*)"What a Good Idea: Frames and Ideologies in Social Movements
Research." (Pamela E. Oliver and Hank Johnston) Mobilization: An
International Journal 5 (1 April) 2000: 37-54. A copy of this article
+ Snow & Benford's reply and our rejoinder are posted
on my web page. Debate about over-use of term "frame."
- Tarrow, Power in Movement, chapter 7.
- Robert Benford. 1993. "Frame Disputes within the Nuclear Disarmament
Movement." Social Forces 71: 677-702. Debates inside the peace
movement about how they would view their issue and present themselves
to others. Stable
URL:
- Robert Benford. 1997. An Insider's Critique of the Social Movement
Framing Perspective. Sociological-Inquiry; 1997, 67, 4, fall, 409-430.
PDF file
- David Snow and Robert Benford. 1992. "Master Frames and Cycles
of Protest." In Morris and Mueller, Frontiers of Social Movement
Theory. How broad frames like "rights" characterize protest
cycles. BC 456-472.
- Hank Johnston. "Antecedents of Coalition: Frame Alignment and
Utilitarian Unity in the Catalan Anti- Francoist Opposition." Research
in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change 13: 241-259. 1991. Broad unity
among Catholics and Marxists and among different ethnic groups and classes
arose as four frame alignment processes converged on a master frame.
- Babb, Sarah "A True American System of Finance": Frame Resonance
in the U.S. Labor Movement, 1866 to 1886. American Sociological Review;
1996, 61, 6, Dec, 1033-1052. Collective action frames are defined as
the ideological tools that organize experience, assess problems, &
offer solutions for the members of social movements. The power of a
given frame to attract & mobilize constituents is dependent on frame
resonance. Greenbackism appealed to the labor movement on two levels:
to constituents suffering from unemployment, & through continuity
with the larger "producerist" master frame, which governed
the collective action frame of labor movement. Stable
URL in JSTOR
- "Hot Movements, Cold Cognition: Thinking about Social Movements
in Gendered Frames" Ferree, Myra Marx and Merrill, David A. Contemporary-Sociology;
2000, 29, 3, May, 454-462. PDF
file A short essay which distinguishes among frame, ideology, discourse.
- (*)Westby, D. L. (2002). Strategic Imperative, Ideology, and Frame.
Mobilization 7(3): 287-304. Framing is (1) a derivative of ideology
& (2) a form of strategic meaning construction; these are jointly
incorporated in persuasive discourse. At least six distinct forms of
framing differ in how ideology & the strategic imperative are bundled
together, affect movements differently. PDF
Click here for key to abbreviations referring to collections
-- CP, BC, MM etc.
III. Frames and Political Opportunities or Strategic
Interactions
- Diani, Mario "Linking Mobilization Frames and Political Opportunities:
Insights from Regional Populism in Italy" American Sociological
Review; 1996, 61, 6, Dec, 1053-1069. Cross-classifying two variables
- the stability of political alignments & the opportunities for
autonomous action within the polity - yields four types of political
structures; each is particularly conducive to different master frames
(antisystem, inclusion, revitalization, & realignment). Resources
become more effective if the strategies they support are framed in a
way consistent with the master frame & the opportunity structure.
Stable
URL:
- * Myra Marx Ferree "Resonance and Radicalism: Feminist
Framing in the Abortion Debates of the
United States and Germany." American Journal of Sociology 2003, Volume 109 Number 2 (September 2003): 304–44 US and German discursive contexts make the ideas that are "resonant" in one context "radical" in another. Not everyone tries to resonate, some prefer to take a radical position. Develops idea of discursive opportunity structure.
- McCarthy, J. D., J. Smith, et al. (1996). Accessing Public, Media,
Electoral, and Governmental Agendas. CP Concerned with specifying the
social structural contexts that condition movement framing efforts,
and condition the repertoires of tactics within these structures. Groups
with more resources tend to use more "insider" tactics. The
article links the agenda-setting literature with ideas of strategy and
tactics.
- Oberschall, A. (1996). Opportunities and Framing in the Eastern European
Revolts of 1989. CP: 93-121. Framing processes determine the perception
of political opportunities. Case histories of the anti-communist revolutions
in Poland, Hungary, East Germany, and Czechoslovakia. Emphasizes crowds
rather than organizations in the revolts.
- Zdravomyslova, E. (1996). Opportunities and Framing in the Transition
to Democracy: The Case of Russia. CP: 122-137. Describes the phases
of the Leningrad revolt, stressing shifts in police responses over time,
and the changing frames and tactics of the movement as it grew in strength.
Police initially repress.
- Gamson, W. A. and D. S. Meyer (1996). Framing Political Opportunity.
CP: 273-290. The perception of political opportunity is framed.
- McAdam, D. (1996). The Framing Function of Movement Tactics: Strategic
Dramaturgy in the American Civil Rights Movement. CP: 338-355. A summary
of the civil rights movement as strategic dramaturgy. The key is that
tactics are frames and there are frames about tactics, that a key were
battles over the interpretation of tactics as legal or illegal, moral
or immoral.
- Rita Noonan. "Women Against the State: Political Opportunities
and Collective Action Frames in Chile's Transition to Democracy."
MS 252-267. Sociological Forum 10: 81-111. 1995. Historical in-depth
case study, how & why women mobilized against the state in Chile.
The manner in which ideology & cultural themes are framed may provide
opportunities for protest, the rise & fall of broader mobilizational
frames or master frames shapes how movement-specific frames compete,
decay, & transform.
- Cadena-Roa, J. (2002). Strategic Framing, Emotions, and Superbarrio-Mexico
City's Masked Crusader. Mobilization 7(2): 201-216 .Copy
in on-line reserves . Spontaneous & emotional dimensions of
social protest, & the expressive dimensions of constructing movement
identities. A"party mood" that prevailed in a Mexico City
social movement organization, the Asamblea de Barrios, created the conditions
for the emergence of Superbarrio, a masked crusader for justice who
used humor & dramaturgy drawn from wrestling culture to help the
urban poor confront the corruption & mismanagement of the Mexican
state. Framing has emotional components, inspired resistance.
IV. Discourse & Narrative
- Williams, Rhys H. (2004). The Cultural Contexts of Collective Action: Constraints, Opportunities, and the Symbolic Life of Social Movements. The Blackwell Companion to Social Movements. D. A. Snow, S. A. Soule and H. Kriesi. Malden, MA and Oxford, UK, Blackwell Publishing: 91-115.
Summary of different cultural approaches to the question of symbolic meaning construction in movements. Invokes the criteria of boundedness (what is in the culture and what is not) and resonance (salience and applicability of cultural elements) for exlanations. Elaborates boundedness and public power, resonance and cultural power, then intersection of boundedness and resonance. (I'm going to have to read this more carefully to follow his key arguments)
- *Stephen Ellingson. "Understanding the Dialectic of Discourse
and Collective Action: Public Debate and Rioting in Antebellum Cincinnati."
American Journal of Sociology 101: 100-144. 1995. MS 268-280. Constructivist
approaches demonstrate how discourse makes some forms of action possible
& legitimate &, conversely, how collective action transforms
the meaning & structure of discourse. Two incidents of mob violence
in Cincinnati interrupted the discursive struggle over abolitionism,
undermining some diagnoses & solutions, while making others more
compelling. Speakers incorporated the events into their discourses. Stable
URL:
- *Steinberg, M. W. (1999). The Talk and Back Talk of Collective
Action: A Dialogic Analysis of Repertoires of Discourse among Nineteenth-Century
English Cotton Spinners. American Journal of Sociology 105(3):
736-780. Critiques framing perspectives on collective action discourse,
offering an alternative dialogic approach that sees collective action
discourse as a joint product of actors' agency & discourse dynamics,
including its multivocal nature. Such discourse is a joint product of
challengers' rational actions & the constraints of the discursive
field. PDF
- (*) Steinberg, M. W. (1998). Tilting the Frame: Considerations
on Collective Action Framing from a Discursive Turn. Theory and
Society 27(6 Dec): 845-872. Critiques the view of discourse offered
by frame analysis, proposing an alternative framework based on analysis
of discursive repertoires. Drawing on Bakhtin circle's discourse literary
theory & sociocultural psychology, a "model of discursive repertoires"
describes discourse as an ideological process driven by inner dialectic
tensions connected to specific sociocultural contexts & patterns
of interaction. PDF
file
- Ann Swidler. "Culture in Action: Symbols and Strategies".
American Sociological Review, Vol. 51, No. 2. (Apr., 1986), pp. 273-286.
PDF file A very useful treatment
of cultural approaches to social movements.
- Kane, A. (1991). Cultural Analysis in Historical Sociology:
The Analytic and Concrete Forms of the Autonomy of Culture. Sociological
Theory 9 (1, spring): 53-69. How to discuss cultural autonomy without
reductionism PDF file
- Kane, A. (2000). Reconstructing Culture in Historical Explanation:
Narratives as Cultural Structure and Practice. History and Theory
39(3, Oct.): 311-330. Argues that meaning construction is at the nexus
of culture, social structure, & social action, & must be the
explicit target of investigation into the cultural dimension of historical
explanation. Empirical analysis of political alliance during the Irish
Land War, 1879-1882, uncover meaning construction by analyzing the symbolic
structures & practices of narrative discourse. PDF
file
- (*) Kane, A. E. (1997). Theorizing Meaning Construction in
Social Movements: Symbolic Structures and Interpretation during the
Irish Land War, 1879-1882. Sociological Theory 15(3, Nov): 249-276.
Argues in contrast to the "tool kit" perspective on culture
that meaning is located in the structure of culture, the metaphoric
nature of symbolic systems, & individual & collective interpretations
of those systems in the context of concrete events, drawing on textual
analysis of meaning construction during the Irish Land War, 1879-1882.
Social movement theory must investigate the metaphoric logic of symbolic
systems & the interpretive process by which individuals construct
meaning. PDF file
- Johnston, H. (1995). A Methodology for Frame Analysis: From Discourse
to Cognitive Schemata. Social Movements and Culture. H. Johnston and
B. Klandermans. Minneapolis, MN, U of Minnesota Press: 217-246.
- km-3. Jane Jenson. "Changing Discourse, Changing Agendas: Political
Rights and Reproductive Policies in France." Talk about alliances,
content of debates for 3 issues (inter-war suffrage, inter-war birth
control, 1970s abortion). no explicit research methodology but lots
of talk about whose ideas were connect to whose, and distinctions, subdivisions.
useful.
- Moaddel, Monsoor. (1992). "Ideology as Episodic Discourse: The
Case of the Iranian Revolution." American Sociological Review 57(3):
353-379. Critiques subjectivist, organizational, Marxist models of ideology
& revolution. Instead revolutionary ideology is episodic discourse,
a language for expressing & disseminating ideas about social problems
& seeking solutions to them in a particular historical episode.
PDF file
- Myra Marx Ferree. "Political Strategies and Feminist Concerns
in the Untied States and Federal Republic of Germany: Class, Race and
Gender." Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change 13:
221-240. 1991. US feminism guided by race analogy, while Germany feminism
by the conflict between gender and class politics. Discourses around
employment policy, reproductive rights, and women in military vary;
political culture important.
- km-8. Myra Ferree. "Equality and Autonomy: Feminist Politics
in the United States and West Germany." difference in type, each
is strong in ways, weak in ways. US liberal, Germany radical.
- km-3. Jane Jenson. "Changing Discourse, Changing Agendas: Political
Rights and Reproductive Policies in France." Talk about alliances,
content of debates for 3 issues (inter-war suffrage, inter-war birth
control, 1970s abortion). no explicit research methodology but lots
of talk about whose ideas were connect to whose, and distinctions, subdivisions.
useful.
- Ron Eyerman and Andrew Jamison. Social Movements: A Cognitive Approach.
1991. Pennsylavaia State University Press. Social movements as cognitive
praxis, as generators of new ideas and knowledge.
Key to abbreviations
- km=Mary F. Katzenstein and Carol M. Mueller, Women's Movements of
the US and Europe. 1987. Temple University Press.
- MS=Doug McAdam and David Snow, editors. Social Movements: Readings
on their Emergence, Mobilization, and Dynamics. Roxbury Press. 1997.
A very current collection as of its publication, emphasizing important
empirical articles. The print is small, but this is an efficient way
to acquire a lot of widely-cited articles.
- BC=Steven Buechler and F. Kurt Cylke, Jr., editors. Social Movements:
Perspectives and Issues. Mayfield Publishing Company. 1997. A fine collection
which gives good coverage to older theories, coverage to more politicized
theory, and also includes some of the important empirical articles.
BC in the syllabus.
- CP=D. McAdam, J. D. McCarthy and M. N. Zald. Comparative Perspectives
on Social Movements: Political Opportunities, Mobilizing Structures,
and Cultural Framings.. New York, Cambridge University Press 1996 (CP
in syllabus) A conference volume that is largely repetitive of the contributors'
prior work, but which provides useful syntheses of their work.
Sociology 924: Social
Movements Calendar Pamela
Oliver
Last updated
October 16, 2009
© University of Wisconsin.
|