The Media and American Society

1992 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 14-19
Author(s):  
J. Nerone
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Teresa A. Mok ◽  
David W. Chih

While the model minority stereotype depicts Asian Americans as having somehow “made it” in American society, rarely does the discourse involve Asian American athletes. The purpose of this chapter is to delineate how race and the model minority myth were an integral part of the media coverage and affected perceptions of the phenomenon known colloquially as “Linsanity,” which charted the unprecedented rise of Jeremy Lin. In 2012, Jeremy Lin became one of the most famous players in the NBA. By exploring the popular press coverage of this event, fueled by the Internet and social media, the intersection of the model minority myth and athletics are investigated. Through a combination of media critique and analysis, narrative, psychological literature, and coverage of other Asian and Asian American athletes, the authors illustrate how racism was a prominent factor and a significant part of the everyday discourse that permeated the coverage of Jeremy Lin.


Author(s):  
Sujatha Fernandes

This chapter looks at how storytelling was used by mainstream immigrant rights groups to produce an aspiring class of upwardly mobile and self-reliant undocumented youth while defusing broader migrant rights activism. In the campaign for legalization through a DREAM Act, the undocumented students known as Dreamers told their stories to the legislature and the media. The students were given scripts to follow that emphasized their achievements, assimilation into American society, and rejection of their home countries. In the lead-up to the 2008 national election and the subsequent push for Comprehensive Immigration Reform (CIR), groups of young people were mobilized in mass storytelling trainings across the country to support the electoral and legislative agenda of mainstream organizations. Eventually, many young people rebelled against this orchestration and sought to take control over their own representations. Some even began to move away from storytelling as a mode of political engagement altogether.


2009 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 171-186
Author(s):  
THEOPHILUS SAVVAS

Robert Coover's 1977 novel The Public Burning is a dramatic re-presentation of the last three days of the lives of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. Dubbed the “atomic spies” by the media, the Rosenbergs were accused of passing on the “secret” of the atomic bomb to the Russians. The sensational trial provoked widespread attention for its seeming encapsulation of the fault lines in American society opened up by anticommunism and the emergent Cold War. Found guilty, they were the first American nationals to be executed for espionage. This paper analyses the different narrative methods that Coover employs to re-present the past. In particular I focus on Coover's juxtaposition of a third-person, seemingly omniscient, narrator with the first-person narratological voice of then Vice President Richard Nixon. I suggest that we can best understand this not simply as providing objective and subjective versions of the event, as some critics have claimed, but rather as a distinction between history as chronicle (or what I call a synchronic method of history), and history as storytelling (or diachrony). Through this The Public Burning becomes not just a satirical critique of the specific political culture of the time, I contend, but, more fundamentally, a general exploration of the difficulties of reconstituting past events into knowledge. It is here, perhaps, where the novel's continuing relevance for today lies.


Journalism ◽  
2022 ◽  
pp. 146488492110633
Author(s):  
Denetra Walker ◽  
Kelli Boling

Through semi-structured interviews with four women news journalists, this study explores how journalists who specialize in women’s issues and health cover Black maternal mortality. Discussions include the role of advocacy in journalism and the struggle of covering the complex, long-standing systemic issue of maternal mortality associated with race in American society. Six themes consider the inclusion of race in healthcare coverage, a need for in-depth, nuanced coverage, the role of advocacy in journalism, complications of reporting on race, the importance of citing sources of color, and celebrity influence. Findings show the need for media advocacy in public health crises, and how journalistic norms can pressure journalists into citing inappropriate sources or diluting the story.


Author(s):  
Jack Reid

This chapter connects the declining popularity and acceptance of hitchhiking with the nation’s economic stagnation in the late 1970s and the rise of the New Right during Ronald Reagan’s two terms in office. An increasingly risk-averse American society began to associate hitchhiking with subversive behaviour and crime. Unlike the youthful faces on the road in previous generations, the hitchhikers of this period—deemed “drifters” by the media—were predominantly out of work and desperate. The conservative movement’s frank acceptance of inequality and staunchly individualistic attitudes, in tandem with changing hitchhiking demographics, weakened the cooperative sentiments of previous decades, providing an easier justification for motorists to ignore so-called ride beggars. Although hitchhiking in many ways gelled with the nation’s automobile-centered transportation infrastructure, its unpredictability and cooperative nature ultimately did not mesh with a more risk-averse and privatized American society.


Contexts ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 22-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia Hill Collins

Black public intellectuals have unprecedented access to the media, but many no longer have daily contact with African-American communities. A few (mostly men) have become academic and media superstars, which helps sustain the illusion that American society is “color blind.”


1978 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 6-39

Ben H. Bakdikian, reporter, editor and contributor to many national magazines, was cited as “journalism's most perceptive critic” at the annual awards luncheon sponsored by the American Society of Journalism School Administrators during the 1978 convention of the Association for Education in Journalism in Seattle. The citation was presented before a standing-room-only crowd by Joe W. Milner of Arizona State University, 1977–78 president of ASJSA. Currently a professor of journalism at the University of California at Berkeley, Bagdikian has been a newsman since he began with the Springfield (Mass.) Morning Union in 1941. He was on the staff of the Providence (R. I.) Journal and Bulletin for 15 years. Bagdikian's interest as a media critic soared in the 1960s when he became a contributing editor to the Saturday Evening Post. He was later assistant managing editor and ombudsman for the Washington Post. Bagdikian's nomination for the ASJSA award stated that he has demonstrated in many ways the necessity of critical evaluation of the performance of all those associated with journalism. “Though many may disagree with his assessments,” the nomination said, “few can fail to react in some way to his judgments concerning the press and its practitioners.” A spokesman for press councils, Bagdikian was project director for the three-year study on newspaper survival sponsored by the Merkle Foundation. The Pulitzer Prize winner is also author of five books, including The Information Machines: Their Impact on Men and the Media.


1982 ◽  
Vol 76 (3) ◽  
pp. 649
Author(s):  
Robert Locander ◽  
Elie Abel
Keyword(s):  

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