Lexington Books
Pages: 228
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4985-2424-7 • Hardback • November 2015 • $115.00 • (£88.00)
978-1-4985-2426-1 • Paperback • May 2017 • $54.99 • (£42.00)
978-1-4985-2425-4 • eBook • November 2015 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
Teri Finneman is an assistant professor of journalism at South Dakota State University and former political reporter.
Chapter One: Politics, Power, and the Press
Chapter Two: Media Vilification of Victoria Woodhull
Chapter Three: Media Legitimization of Jeannette Rankin
Chapter Four: Media Negligence of Margaret Chase Smith
Chapter Five: Media Celebritization of Sarah Palin
Chapter Six: From Woodhull to Palin & Moving Forward
Appendix: Methodology
Press Portrayals ofWomen Politicians is organized and written logically, coherently, and persuasively. The chapters progress chronologically, guiding the reader through news coverage of female political candidates during various waves of feminism and shifts in journalistic norms. The case studies follow similar structures, enabling a clear progression of ideas and comparison across female candidates. In its tone and structure, the book reads, at times, like it may have evolved from a doctoral dissertation but is engaging and accessible. It will appeal to scholars across disciplines and readers with an interest in gender, politics, and media at their various intersections. In the short term, it is timely in light of the upcoming 2016 presidential election and Hillary Clinton’s place within it. In the long term, it is a lasting contribution to knowledge about political women pioneers specifically and women’s political history generally.
— American Journalism: A Media History Journal
In this relevant and thought-provoking book, Finneman reveals a historical arc of discursive inequality in mainstream media coverage of women politicians and how this gendered framing has consistently been used to limit women’s advancement in the American political arena. This book should be core reading for students and teachers of gender, politics, and the American media.
— Candi S. Carter Olson, Utah State University
This careful historical study of campaign news coverage illustrates the nexus of gendered norms and tropes that cross party lines in discourses legitimating and/or delegitimating women’s political leadership—and it is unique in offering practical advice for both politicians and journalists. While Finneman’s findings are particularly insightful for feminist scholars struggling to sift through complex portraits of conservative female figures in both campaign rhetoric and media representations, her analysis touches on much larger themes of cultural stasis and change. In attending to particular differences as well as larger patterns, Finneman provides a detailed mapping of the media landscape on which gender in contemporary U.S. political culture is operating.
— Joan Faber McAlister, Drake University
Finneman engages in the important work of documenting the races of historically important women politicians and analyzing the press coverage in a way that helps advance our generalized understanding of how the press operates with regard to the changing role of women in the political sphere. This is a well-written and enjoyable book that adds important new data and analysis to the literature on press coverage of political women. It tackles an important topic and does it well.
— Erika Falk, author of Women for President
Finneman’s book is a timely and penetrating analysis of how four female political leaders across three centuries were portrayed by the media of their era. It taps into the frames of press interaction with the women politicians studied, with their own campaign rhetoric and with the broader notions of gender bias in public discourse. Her sampling methodology is sound and the use of a historical-diachronic approach contributes to the depth of analysis. The current Presidental campaign could add another chapter!
— Jeff Fruit, Professor of Journalism and Mass Communication at Kent State University; Vice-President of Kappa Tau Alpha
• Long-listed, Frank Luther Mott - Kappa Tau Alpha Journalism & Mass Communication Research Award (Finalist)