Unsettling Victory: Storylines of Success and Anxiety in the Coverage of the Decline of ISIS in Three U.S. Newspapers

Authors

  • Stefanie Z. Demetriades University of Southern California
  • Christina Hagen University of Southern California
  • Daria Baxter Griffith University of Southern California
  • Patricia Riley University of Southern California

Keywords:

terrorism, narrative, discursive fields, news, topic modeling

Abstract

This study analyzed contested media narratives of the ISIS/ISIL terrorist group as it transitioned from a self-declared caliphate to a decentralized terrorist group. The study focused on U.S. newspaper coverage during 2017 as a key period of transition during which the Islamic State’s territorial assets diminished drastically. Utilizing a combination of topic modeling and close qualitative analysis, our investigation analyzed changes in news narratives during the shrinking of the organization’s material features and critically examined deep structures in the news coverage: How was the nature of the threat posed by ISIS (re)defined narratively in light of its territorial losses? And did this “victory” at Mosul fortify the U.S. meta-narrative around a newly vanquished ISIS? Analysis found intersecting storylines of American success and sustained anxiety about future attacks in the United States and continued struggles against ISIS. More fundamentally, these findings point to ISIS’s deeply embedded influence and place in U.S. narratives as it lost its physical space yet retained an assemblage of potential global terrorist relationships that construct its imagined caliphate and expands its network.

Author Biographies

Stefanie Z. Demetriades, University of Southern California

Stefanie Demetriades is a postdoctoral research fellow at Northwestern University. She received her PhD from the University of Southern California in 2020.sdemetri@usc.edu, 626.590.4590

Christina Hagen, University of Southern California

Christina Hagen is a PhD student at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism.

Daria Baxter Griffith, University of Southern California

PhD student at USC at the start of the project, but now works at Qualcomm.

Patricia Riley, University of Southern California

Patricia Riley is a professor of communication at the University of Southern California.

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Published

2021-10-12

Issue

Section

Articles