Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 384
Trim: 7⅛ x 10⅛
978-0-8476-9453-2 • Paperback • August 2005 • $63.00 • (£48.00)
Stephanie Greco Larson is professor of political science at Dickinson College.
Chapter 1 "Reality" Television: American Myths and Racial Ideology
Part 2 Part I: Racial Minorities in Films and Television Entertainment
Chapter 3 Racial Politics in Fictional Media: Films and Television
Chapter 4 African Americans in Film and Television Entertainment
Chapter 5 Native Americans in Film and Television Entertainment
Chapter 6 Hispanics in Film and Television Entertainment
Chapter 7 Asian Americans in Film and Television Entertainment
Part 8 Part II: News Coverage of Racial-Minority Mass Publics
Chapter 9 Representations of Racial-Minority Mass Publics in the News
Chapter 10 African American Mass Publics in the News
Chapter 11 Native American Mass Publics in the News
Chapter 12 Hispanic Mass Publics in the News
Chapter 13 Asian American Mass Publics in the News
Part 14 Part III: News Coverage of Racial-Minority Social Movements
Chapter 15 Social Movements and the Media: An Introduction
Chapter 16 The Civil Rights Movement and the Mass Media
Chapter 17 Native Americans, Chicanos, and Asian Americans: Social Movements and the Media
Part 18 Part IV: News Coverage of Racial-Minority Candidates and Politicians
Chapter 19 Media Coverage of Candidates and Politicians: An Introduction
Chapter 20 News Coverage of Black Candidates and Politicians
Chapter 21 Newspaper Coverage of Native American Candidates and Politicians
Chapter 22 Coverage of Hispanic Candidates and Politicians
Chapter 23 Newspaper Coverage of Asian American Candidates and Politicians
Chapter 24 Conclusion
Stephanie Greco Larson has provided an invaluable service by synthesizing a vast quantity of studies of entertainment media and news about racial and ethnic minorities, about civil rights movements, and about elected officials of color. The recurrent patterns she finds across media, across subject matters, and across different races and ethnicities are vividly presented, sobering, and of importance to those both inside and outside of the media.
— Timothy Cook, Reilly Chair in Political Communication, Manship School of Mass Communication, Louisiana State University
Media & Minorities is a wonder of empirically-grounded comparative research that both illuminates current realities and helps set the agenda for work that will be done in the future. This substantial volume will be a standard reference for those in academia, public policy circles, and community-based media organizations.
— Darrell Y. Hamamoto, University of California, Davis
Media & Minorities is a must-read not only for political junkies but also for ordinary people who are trying to figure out why minority stereotypes are so ubiquitous on entertainment shows and how those same images are employed in political discourse and in the coverage of minority candidates running for political office. In revealing how the media sometimes surreptitiously invoke stereotypes, Larson demonstrates how the choice of words, descriptions, and images can be used to malign minorities and their causes. Media & Minorities contains a sufficient compendium of research resources to satisfy scholars and enough accessibility to alert other readers to the complexity of media interaction with politics. It is also a wonderful tool for teaching students about the way the media, both broadcast and print, influence the entire political process.
— Wilbur C. Rich, Wellesley College
[Larson] is to be commended for understanding her topic broadly: she targets both news broadcasting and popular entertainment (television, film, radio) and focuses not only on African Americans and Latino/as but also on Asian Americans and Native Americans. Her numerous film examples range from the contemporary to the classic to the obscure. Armed with thorough scholarly evidence, and selected original data, Larson looks at patterns in coverage of people, political movements, and politicians.
— Choice Reviews
This is a god read for those interested in the representation of race and ethnicity in the media, especially in the U.S. Media & Minorities unravels a rich and captivating historical journey through the media coverage of diversity; it shows us what has changed and what has remained the same on screen and in press representations of Otherness
— Ethnic and Racial Studies
—A first of its kind look at four different U.S. minority groups—African Americans, Native Americans, Hispanics, and Asian Americans—in the context of their media exposure.
—Media covered included news as well as entertainment—movies,TV, and radio.
—Politics, news, and minority political candidates are areas of special emphasis.
—Historical and contemporary coverage.
—Special emphasis on the Civil Rights era in the United States.
—Fun and serious examples of how the various (supposedly liberal) media have treated minorities unfairly can be found throughout.