(Mis)Representing Islam explores and illustrates how élite broadsheet newspapers are implicated in the production and reproduction of anti-Muslim racism. The book approaches journalistic discourse as the inseparable combination of ‘social practices’, ‘discursive practices’ and the ‘texts’ themselves from a perspective which fuses Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) with Edward Said’s critique of Orientalism. This framework enables Richardson to (re)contextualise élite journalism within its professional, political, economic, social and historic settings and present a critical and precise examination of not only the prevalence but also the form and potential effects of anti-Muslim racism. The book analyses the centrality of van Dijk’s ideological square and the significance and utility of stereotypical topoi in representing Islam and Muslims, focusing in particular on the reporting of Turkey, Pakistan, Iran, Israel/Palestine, Algeria, Iraq and Britain. This timely book should interest researchers and students of racism, Islam, Journalism and Communication studies, Rhetoric, and (Critical) Discourse Analysis.
“John Richardson’s excellent new book offers a detailed, academic and insightful study of the reporting of Islam and the Muslim world in Britain’s ‘quality’ broadsheet newspapers. His scholarly analysis of the language of press reports reveals the underlying and sometimes Islamophobic assumptions which inform newspapers’ coverage of Muslims in the UK, in Iraq and other parts of the world. Accessibly written and illustrated with examples drawn from the pages of the broadsheet press, (Mis)Representing Islam is essential, even compelling, reading for students of journalism, media and communication studies, while for the general reader it unravels the ways in which newspapers interpret as well as report significant issues. This is a timely book, which will encourage readers to look more closely, and think more skeptically, about what they read about Islam in Britain’s broadsheet press.”
Bob Franklin, Professor of Media Communications, Department of Journalism Studies, University of Sheffield
“This work is remarkable for its depth of analysis and the extensive research conducted provides the basis for scrutiny not only of what is reported and how it is reported, but also what is consistently left out. [...] Richardson makes a strong case for the interaction between language and social power.”
Linnea Micciulla, Boston University, on Linguist List Vol. 15-1973
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2015. Discourse and Media. In The Handbook of Discourse Analysis, ► pp. 795 ff.
Ekman, Mattias
2015. Online Islamophobia and the politics of fear: manufacturing the green scare. Ethnic and Racial Studies 38:11 ► pp. 1986 ff.
Gonzalez, Philippe
2015. Montrer les minarets pour imposer une Suisse « chrétienne ». In Quel âge post-séculier ?, ► pp. 249 ff.
Gonzalez, Philippe
2015. Quand la droite nationaliste montre les minarets :la médiatisation ambiguë d’une initiative populaire en Suisse. Canadian Journal of Communication 40:1 ► pp. 67 ff.
Hake, Rolf
2015.
Counter-Stereotypical Images of Muslim Characters in the Television Serial
24
: A Difference That Makes No Difference?
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Jiwani, Yasmin
2015. Discourse Studies. In The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism, ► pp. 1 ff.
Karlsen, Saffron & James Y. Nazroo
2015. Ethnic and Religious Differences in the Attitudes of People towards Being ‘British’. The Sociological Review 63:4 ► pp. 759 ff.
Le Grand, Elias
2015. Linking Moralisation and Class Identity: The Role of Ressentiment and Respectability in the Social Reaction to ‘Chavs’. Sociological Research Online 20:4 ► pp. 18 ff.
2015. British-Born Pakistani and Bangladeshi Young Men: Exploring Unstable Concepts of Muslim, Islamophobia and Racialization. Critical Sociology 41:1 ► pp. 97 ff.
Miller, Ana K.
2015. Circulating the peripheries: Small publishers, short story collections and Madinah: City Stories from the Middle East. The Journal of Commonwealth Literature 50:2 ► pp. 115 ff.
Samie, Sumaya Farooq & Sertaç Sehlikoglu
2015. Strange, Incompetent and Out-Of-Place. Feminist Media Studies 15:3 ► pp. 363 ff.
Sobolewska, Maria & Sundas Ali
2015. Who speaks for Muslims? The role of the press in the creation and reporting of Muslim public opinion polls in the aftermath of London bombings in July 2005. Ethnicities 15:5 ► pp. 675 ff.
Van Dijk, Teun A.
2015. Critical Discourse Analysis. In The Handbook of Discourse Analysis, ► pp. 466 ff.
Wodak, Ruth & Martin Reisigl
2015. Discourse and Racism. In The Handbook of Discourse Analysis, ► pp. 576 ff.
Beta, Annisa R
2014. Hijabers: How young urban muslim women redefine themselves in Indonesia. International Communication Gazette 76:4-5 ► pp. 377 ff.
2014. ‘Greece will decide the future of Europe’: The recontextualisation of the Greek national elections in a British broadsheet newspaper. Discourse & Society 25:4 ► pp. 467 ff.
Martinez Lirola, Maria
2014. Exploring visual dysphemisms in pieces of news related to immigrant minors in a Spanish newspaper. Visual Communication 13:4 ► pp. 405 ff.
Salama, Amir H.Y. & Alexander Dick
2014. Decoding the socio-political meanings of Presidential “I” in Mubarak’s last presidential speech: A systemic-functional approach. Cogent Arts & Humanities 1:1 ► pp. 977554 ff.
Schwarz, Ori
2014. Arab sounds in a contested space: life quality, cultural hierarchies and national silencing. Ethnic and Racial Studies 37:11 ► pp. 2034 ff.
2013. Passing the Dinner Table Test. Sage Open 3:2
Baker, Paul & Amanda Potts
2013. ‘Why do white people have thin lips?’ Google and the perpetuation of stereotypes via auto-complete search forms. Critical Discourse Studies 10:2 ► pp. 187 ff.
2013. The role of fear and envy in the discursive construction of the Beijing Olympics in British broadsheets. Critical Discourse Studies 10:3 ► pp. 275 ff.
Kluknavská, Alena & Lenka Zagibová
2013. Neprispôsobiví Rómovia a slušná väčšina? Spravodajský diskurz po násilných udalostiach na severe Českej republiky 2011. Středoevropské politické studie Central European Political Studies Review 15:4 ► pp. 300 ff.
Montali, Lorenzo, Paolo Riva, Alessandra Frigerio & Silvia Mele
2012. The veil under attack. International Review of Victimology 18:3 ► pp. 269 ff.
Hussain, Yasmin & Paul Bagguley
2012. Securitized Citizens: Islamophobia, Racism and the 7/7 London Bombings. The Sociological Review 60:4 ► pp. 715 ff.
Jahedi, Maryam & Faiz Sathi Abdullah
2012. The Ideological Construction of Iran inThe NYT. Australian Journal of Linguistics 32:3 ► pp. 361 ff.
Nickels, Henri C, Lyn Thomas, Mary J Hickman & Sara Silvestri
2012. Constructing ‘suspect’ communities and Britishness: Mapping British press coverage of Irish and Muslim communities, 1974–2007. European Journal of Communication 27:2 ► pp. 135 ff.
Nickels, Henri C., Lyn Thomas, Mary J. Hickman & Sara Silvestri
2012. La transversalité du genre : l'islam et les musulmans dans la presse suisse francophone. Cahiers du Genre n° 52:1 ► pp. 197 ff.
Parini, Lorena, Matteo Gianni & Gaëtan Clavien
2012. La transversalité du genre : l’islam et les musulmans dans la presse suisse francophone1. Recherches féministes 25:1 ► pp. 163 ff.
Pohl, Walter & Ruth Wodak
2012. The Discursive Construction of “Migrants and Migration”. In Migrations: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, ► pp. 205 ff.
Toldy, Teresa
2012. “Cautela com os amores”. Declarações do Cardeal de Lisboa vistas pela imprensa portuguesa. e-cadernos CES 16
Faimau, Gabriel
2011. NAMING MUSLIMS AS PARTNERS. Journalism Studies 12:4 ► pp. 474 ff.
Faimau, Gabriel
2015. The Conflictual Model of Analysis in Studies on the Media Representation of Islam and Muslims: A Critical Review. Sociology Compass 9:5 ► pp. 321 ff.
Field, Clive D.
2011. Islamophobia. Journal of Contemporary Religion 26:3 ► pp. 509 ff.
Forrest, James & Kevin Dunn
2011. Attitudes to Diversity: new perspectives on the ethnic geography of Brisbane, Australia. Australian Geographer 42:4 ► pp. 435 ff.
Foster, Nena, Kay Cook, Sarah Barter-Godfrey & Samantha Furneaux
2011. Fractured multiculturalism: Conflicting representations of Arab and Muslim Australians in Australian print media. Media, Culture & Society 33:4 ► pp. 619 ff.
Hart, Roderick P. & Colene J. Lind
2011. The rhetoric of Islamic activism: ADICTIONstudy. Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict 4:2 ► pp. 113 ff.
Licata, Laurent, Margarita Sanchez-Mazas & Eva G.T. Green
2011. Identity, Immigration, and Prejudice in Europe: A Recognition Approach. In Handbook of Identity Theory and Research, ► pp. 895 ff.
2012. Acceptable bias? Using corpus linguistics methods with critical discourse analysis. Critical Discourse Studies 9:3 ► pp. 247 ff.
Baker, Paul
2023. Associations Between Islam, Extremism and Terrorism in the British National News 1998–2019. In Media Language on Islam and Muslims, ► pp. 83 ff.
Jaspal, Rusi & Marco Cinnirella
2010. Media representations of British Muslims and hybridised threats to identity. Contemporary Islam 4:3 ► pp. 289 ff.
Jaspal, Rusi & Marco Cinnirella
2012. Identity Processes, Threat, and Interpersonal Relations: Accounts From British Muslim Gay Men. Journal of Homosexuality 59:2 ► pp. 215 ff.
Jaspal, Rusi & Marco Cinnirella
2012. The construction of ethnic identity: Insights from identity process theory. Ethnicities 12:5 ► pp. 503 ff.
Malcolm, Dominic, Alan Bairner & Graham Curry
2010. “Woolmergate”: Cricket and the Representation of Islam and Muslims in the British Press. Journal of Sport and Social Issues 34:2 ► pp. 215 ff.
van Zoonen, Liesbet, Farida Vis & Sabina Mihelj
2010. Performing citizenship on YouTube: activism, satire and online debate around the anti-Islam videoFitna. Critical Discourse Studies 7:4 ► pp. 249 ff.
Žagar, Igor
2010. Topoi in Critical Discourse Analysis. Lodz Papers in Pragmatics 6:1
Ahadi, Daniel
2009. L'Affaire Hérouxville in context: Conflicting narratives on Islam, Muslim women, and identity. Journal of Arab & Muslim Media Research 2:3 ► pp. 241 ff.
al-Saud, Bader S. M
2009. Friend or Foe? Saudi Arabia in the British Press post 9/11. Journal of Arab & Muslim Media Research 2:1 ► pp. 39 ff.
Amer, M. Mosheer
2009. `Telling-it-like-it-is': the delegitimation of the second Palestinian Intifada in Thomas Friedman's discourse. Discourse & Society 20:1 ► pp. 5 ff.
Baker, Paul, Costas Gabrielatos, Majid KhosraviNik, Michał Krzyżanowski, Tony McEnery & Ruth Wodak
2008. A useful methodological synergy? Combining critical discourse analysis and corpus linguistics to examine discourses of refugees and asylum seekers in the UK press. Discourse & Society 19:3 ► pp. 273 ff.
2008. Islamophobia in the media: a response from multicultural education1. Intercultural Education 19:2 ► pp. 119 ff.
Mishra, Smeeta
2008. Islam and Democracy. Journal of Communication Inquiry 32:2 ► pp. 155 ff.
Negrine, Ralph
2008. Imagining Turkey. Journalism 9:5 ► pp. 624 ff.
Richardson, John E.
2008. LANGUAGE AND JOURNALISM. Journalism Studies 9:2 ► pp. 152 ff.
Šisler, Vít
2008. Digital Arabs. European Journal of Cultural Studies 11:2 ► pp. 203 ff.
d’Haenens, Leen & Susan Bink
2007. Islam in der Presse der Niederlande. In Medien und Migration, ► pp. 71 ff.
Moore, Kerry & Sadie Clifford
2007. The gendered use of the media by asylum seekers in Britain. Gender & Development 15:3 ► pp. 451 ff.
Blackledge, Adrian
2006. The racialization of language in British political discourse. Critical Discourse Studies 3:1 ► pp. 61 ff.
d'Haenens, Leen & Susan Bink
2006. Islam in de Nederlandse media: Focus op hetAlgemeen Dagblad/Islam in the Dutch press: With special focus on theAlgemeen Dagblad. Tijdschrift voor Communicatiewetenschappen 34:4 ► pp. 351 ff.
D'Haenens, Leen & Susan Bink
2007. Islam in the Dutch press: with special attention to the Algemeen Dagblad. Media, Culture & Society 29:1 ► pp. 135 ff.
Erjavec, Karmen & Zala Volcic
2006. Mapping the Notion of “Terrorism” in Serbian and Croatian Newspapers. Journal of Communication Inquiry 30:4 ► pp. 298 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 21 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.