Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 376
Trim: 5¼ x 8¾
978-0-7425-2712-6 • Hardback • May 2004 • $157.00 • (£121.00)
978-0-7425-2713-3 • Paperback • May 2004 • $67.00 • (£52.00)
Don Heider is associate professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 1 Media, Class, and Power: Debunking the Myth of a Classless Society
Part 3 Part I Class in Print
Chapter 4 2 Choosing Sources: How the Press Perpetuated the Myth of the Single Mother on Welfare
Chapter 5 3 Poor People in the News: Images from the Journalistic Subconscious
Chapter 6 4 Picturing Class: Mining the Field of Front Page Photographs for Keys to Accidental Communities of Memory
Part 7 Part II Class on Television
Chapter 8 5 Class and Local TV News
Chapter 9 6 The Social Stratification Potential of Tabloid and Highbrow News Magazine Programs
Chapter 10 7 Constructing a Televisual Class: Newsmagazines and Social Class
Chapter 11 8 Calling Class: Sports Announcers and the Culture of Poverty
Part 12 Part III Constructing Class Groups
Chapter 13 9 'America is a Middle-Class Nation': The Presentation of Class in the Pages of Life Magazine
Chapter 14 10 Tales Told in Two Cities: When Missing Women Are(n't) News
Chapter 15 11 'Trailer-Park Trash': News, Ideology, and Depictions of the American Underclass
Part 16 Part IV Labor, Workers, and News
Chapter 17 12 The Emergence of Class Consciousness in the American Newspaper Guild
Chapter 18 13 Writing the Workers' World Trade Center: An Analysis of Reportage on Ground Zero in the Aftermath of September 11
Chapter 19 14 UPS Strike Coverage and the Future of Labor in Corporate News
Part 20 Part V Prospects for Change
Chapter 21 15 Good News from a Bad Neighborhood: Urban Journalism and Community Assets
Chapter 22 16 Class and Media Influence in Australia
Chapter 23 17 Television Civic Journalism and the Portrayal of Class
Chapter 24 Epilogue
Heider has brought together some excellent current scholarship explicating the very concept of class in America, how news influences people's ideas about class and what people believe and how they act, the way meaning is constructed in news, and how media operate to create or reinforce social values. No doubt the book will enlighten veteran scholars as well as readers who have not given the subject much attention. This book should be essential reading for students and scholars seriously interested in mass communication and society.
— Mass Communication and Society
Essential.
— Choice Reviews
This book deserves to be read by anyone who cares about classed news and its intersections with race and gender. Its deliberate eclecticism offers a range of methods that might make it especially useful for graduate students formulating their own research agendas and strategies.
— Political Communication
Class and News is a lively anthology of news media studies which brings class and class bias back into media sociology. Heider's authors demonstrate how much America's news is still produced largely for and about the country's middle classes while ignoring or demonizing those lower in the socio-economic pecking order.
— Herbert J. Gans, Robert S. Lynd Professor Emeritus of Sociology, Columbia University; author of Making Sense of America