Screening the Los Angeles "riots" : race, seeing, and resistance /

Hunt, Darnell M.,

Screening the Los Angeles "riots" : race, seeing, and resistance / Darnell M. Hunt. - xv, 313 pages ; 24 cm. - Cambridge cultural social studies . - Cambridge cultural social studies. .

Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-310) and index.

Introduction -- Context and Text: -- Media, race and resistance -- Establishing a meaningful benchmark: the KTTV text and its assumptions -- Audience: -- Stigmatized by association: Latino-raced informants and the KTTV text -- Ambivalent insiders: black-raced informants and the KTTV text -- Innocent bystanders: white-raced informants and the KTTV text -- Analysis and Conclusions: -- Raced ways of seeing -- Meaning-making and resistance. 1. Part I. 2. 3. Part II. 4. 5. 6. Part III. 7. 8.

"On April 29, 1992, the "worst riots of the century" (Los Angeles Times) erupted. Television newsworkers tried frantically to keep up with what was happening on the streets while, around the city, nation and globe, viewers watched intently as leaders, participants, and fires flashed across their television screens. Screening the Los Angeles "riots" zeroes in on the first night of these events, exploring in detail the meanings one news organization found in them, as well as those made by fifteen groups of viewers in the events' aftermath. Combining ethnographic and quasi-experimental methods, Darnell M. Hunt's account reveals how race shapes both television's construction of news and viewers' understandings of it. He engages with the longstanding debates about the power of television to shape our thoughts versus our ability to resist, and concludes with implications for progressive change."--Jacket.

0521570875 9780521570879 0521578140 9780521578141

96010443


Television broadcasting of news--California--Los Angeles
Race relations and the press--United States

PN4888.T4 / H86 1997

070.195

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