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What movies teach about race: exceptionalism, erasure, and entitlement

Part of the Rhetoric, Race, and Religion series
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What Movies Teach About Race: Exceptionalism, Erasure, & Entitlementreveals the way that media frames in entertainment content persuade audiences to see themselves and others through a prescriptive lens that favors whiteness. These media representations threaten democracy as conglomeration and convergence concentrate the media’s global influence in the hands of a few corporations. By linking film’s political economy with the movie content in the most influential films, this critical discourse study uncovers the socially-shared cognitive structures that the movie industry passes down from one generation to another. Roslyn M. Satchel encourages media literacy and proposes an entertainment media cascading network activation theory that uncovers racialized rhetoric in media content that cyclically begins in historic ideologies, influences elite discourse, embeds in media systems, produces media frames and representations, shapes public opinion, and then is recycled and perpetuated generationally.

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£114.00
Product Details
Lexington Books
1498531822 / 9781498531825
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
29/11/2016
English
187 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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