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E-grāmata: Race and Gender in Electronic Media: Content, Context, Culture

Edited by (University of Illinios at Chicago, IL, USA)
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This volume examines the consequences, implications, and opportunities associated with issues of diversity in the electronic media. With a focus on race and gender, the chapters represent diverse approaches, including social scientific, humanistic, critical, and rhetorical. The contributors consider race and gender issues in both historical and contemporary electronic media, and their work is presented in three sections: content, context (audiences, effects, and reception), and culture (media industries, policy, and production). In this book, the authors investigate, problematize, and theorize a variety of concerns which at their core relate to issues of difference. How do we use media to construct and understand different social groups? How do the media represent and affect our engagement with and responses to different social groups? How can we understand these processes and the environment within which they occur? Although this book focuses on the differences associated with race and gender, the questions raised by and the theoretical perspectives presented in the chapters are applicable to other forms of socially-constructed difference.

Chapters 5, 10, 12, and 19 of this book are freely available as downloadable Open Access PDFs at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
List of Contributors
viii
Series Editor's Foreword xv
Acknowledgments xvii
1 Race and Gender in Electronic Media: Perennial Challenges and Opportunities
1(18)
Rebecca Ann Lind
PART I Content
19(104)
2 Race and Sex in Prime Time: Five Decades of Research
21(17)
Nancy Signorielli
3 Frames of the Olympic Host: Media Coverage of Russia's Anti-Gay Legislation
38(17)
Andrew C. Billings
Leigh M. Moscowitz
Yiyi Yang
4 Uniquely Glee: Transing Racialized Gender
55(17)
Gust A. Yep
Sage E. Russo
Jace K. Allen
Nicholas T. Chivers
5 The Challenge of Warrior Women: Gender, Race, and Militarism in Media
72(17)
Mary Douglas Vavrus
6 Nurturing New Men and Polishing Imperfect Fathers Via Hetero- and Homosocial Relationships in Pixar Films
89(16)
Bruce W. Finklea
7 The Blind Gaze of the Zombie Normalizes the Landscape: Killing Off Inequalities When Walking Among the Undead
105(18)
Kim Baker
PART II Context: Audiences, Effects, Reception
123(142)
8 Manipulating Race and Gender in Media Effects Research: A Methodological Review Using the Media FIT Taxonomy
125(19)
Charisse Lpree Corsbie-Massay
9 Portrayals of Latinos in the Media and the Effects of Exposure on Latino and Non-Latino Audiences
144(17)
Dana Mastro
Alexander Sink
10 Understanding How the Internet and Social Media Accelerate Racial Stereotyping and Social Division: The Socially Mediated Stereotyping Model
161(18)
Travis L. Dixon
11 Our Country, Our Language, Our Server: Xenophobic and racist discourse in League of Legends
179(16)
Robert Alan Brookey
Charles Ecenbarger
12 #IfTheyGunnedMeDown: Postmodern Media Criticism in a Post-Racial World
195(18)
Christopher P. Campbell
13 The Democratic Potential of Feminist Twitter
213(18)
Linda Steiner
Stine Eckert
14 Producing Sexual Cultures and Pseudonymous Publics with Digital Networks
231(16)
Ben Light
15 Islamic Fashion Images on Instagram and the Visuality of Muslim Women
247(18)
Kristin M. Peterson
PART III Culture: Media Industries, Policy, Production
265(114)
16 Women's Access to Media: Legal Dimensions of Ownership and Employment in the United States
267(26)
Carolyn M. Byerly
Alisa Valentin
17 Second Class Netizens: Race and the Emerging Mobile Internet Underclass
293(19)
Philip M. Napoli
Jonathan A. Obar
18 "Damseling for Dollars": Toxic Technocultures and Geek Masculinity
312(16)
Adrienne L. Massanari
19 This Week in Blackness and the Construction of Blackness in Independent Digital Media
328(18)
Sarah Florini
20 Problems and Prospects of Spanish Language Television Broadcasting in the United States
346(15)
Alan B. Albarran
Nicole Warncke
21 Ethical Sensitivity Assessment in Educational Settings: Examining Awareness of Ethical Issues Related to Media and Diversity
361(18)
Rebecca Ann Lind
Tammy Swenson-Lepper
Index 379
Rebecca Ann Lind is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Illinois.