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Straight news : gays, lesbians, and the news media / Edward Alwood.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Between men--between womenPublisher: New York : Columbia University Press, [1996]Copyright date: ©1996Description: xvi, 386 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0231084366
  • 9780231084369
  • 0231084374
  • 9780231084376
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 306.766 22
LOC classification:
  • P96.S45 A44 1996
Contents:
Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Pt. I. The News Media Discover Homosexuality: World War II to Stonewall, 1943-1969 -- 1. A Community Discovers Itself -- 2. Out of the Shadows -- 3. Becoming Front-Page News -- 4. Covering Stonewall -- Pt. 2. Progress and Backlash, 1970-1980 -- 5. Gay News, Straight Media -- 6. Becoming Visible -- 7. TV Becomes a Battleground -- 8. Working in Newspapers -- 9. Gay Power, Gay Politics -- 10. Lessons from the Ramrod -- Pt. 3. Requiem for the Media, 1981-1994 -- 11. Responding to AIDS -- 12. THe Experience of AIDS -- 13. The Consequences of Outing -- 14. The '90s and Beyond -- Epilogue -- Notes -- Index.
Summary: From the flurry of reportage on alleged homosexual depravity in the 1950s to the growing sensitivity to the AIDS epidemic, symbolized by broadcast journalist Paul Wynne's seven-month coverage of his own illness on San Francisco television, Straight News traces the stories that made the cut and the changing attitudes toward gay issues that they represent. In addition, Alwood examines major stories that received scant attention in the mainstream media - such as the Stonewall rebellion of 1969 and the mass murder at New York's Ramrod bar in 1980 - throwing light on the ways in which news stories are generated, assigned, and edited, and how the process of deciding what's news and what's not has historically led to the exclusion of gay and lesbian voices and concerns.Summary: Straight News also explores how lesbian and gay journalists have fared in the nation's newsrooms. Drawing on a series of interviews, Alwood documents the struggles of closeted journalists to keep their personal lives private when disclosure would have jeopardized their careers. He points to the recent emergence and growing acceptance of openly gay journalists in the mainstream media, including Randy Shilts of the San Francisco Chronicle and Linda Villarosa, the executive editor at Essence, who announced her lesbianism in a 1991 article. Throughout the book, Alwood provides a far-reaching historical review of the attempts in the gay community to gain responsible news coverage and describes efforts to create an independent voice in a lesbian and gay press, from the Mattachine Review to the Advocate.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 306.766 ALW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A136190B

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Pt. I. The News Media Discover Homosexuality: World War II to Stonewall, 1943-1969 -- 1. A Community Discovers Itself -- 2. Out of the Shadows -- 3. Becoming Front-Page News -- 4. Covering Stonewall -- Pt. 2. Progress and Backlash, 1970-1980 -- 5. Gay News, Straight Media -- 6. Becoming Visible -- 7. TV Becomes a Battleground -- 8. Working in Newspapers -- 9. Gay Power, Gay Politics -- 10. Lessons from the Ramrod -- Pt. 3. Requiem for the Media, 1981-1994 -- 11. Responding to AIDS -- 12. THe Experience of AIDS -- 13. The Consequences of Outing -- 14. The '90s and Beyond -- Epilogue -- Notes -- Index.

From the flurry of reportage on alleged homosexual depravity in the 1950s to the growing sensitivity to the AIDS epidemic, symbolized by broadcast journalist Paul Wynne's seven-month coverage of his own illness on San Francisco television, Straight News traces the stories that made the cut and the changing attitudes toward gay issues that they represent. In addition, Alwood examines major stories that received scant attention in the mainstream media - such as the Stonewall rebellion of 1969 and the mass murder at New York's Ramrod bar in 1980 - throwing light on the ways in which news stories are generated, assigned, and edited, and how the process of deciding what's news and what's not has historically led to the exclusion of gay and lesbian voices and concerns.

Straight News also explores how lesbian and gay journalists have fared in the nation's newsrooms. Drawing on a series of interviews, Alwood documents the struggles of closeted journalists to keep their personal lives private when disclosure would have jeopardized their careers. He points to the recent emergence and growing acceptance of openly gay journalists in the mainstream media, including Randy Shilts of the San Francisco Chronicle and Linda Villarosa, the executive editor at Essence, who announced her lesbianism in a 1991 article. Throughout the book, Alwood provides a far-reaching historical review of the attempts in the gay community to gain responsible news coverage and describes efforts to create an independent voice in a lesbian and gay press, from the Mattachine Review to the Advocate.

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