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Women and Violence: Media Making the Call

A look at the adverse socio-effects resulting from the media’s portrayal of women and violence

Título: Women and Violence: Media Making the Call

Redacción Científica , 2009 , 10 Páginas , Calificación: 87%

Autor:in: Cory Contini (Autor)

Sociología - Sistemas sociales y Estructuras sociales
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Resumen Extracto de texto Detalles

Through extensive research, this paper concludes that often times it is not the details of the crime that determine whether a story will receive news coverage, rather, it is the woman’s age, race, nationality, class, or even appearance, that determines it; and that furthermore, this portrayal of women in the media is detrimental for women in society.

Extracto


Table of Contents

1. Introduction

2. Defining Newsworthiness and Professional Imperatives

3. Media Portrayal and Victim Blaming

4. Empirical Analysis of Media Coverage

5. Case Study: The Ardeth Wood Incident

6. Socio-Behavioral Effects and Media Responsibility

Research Objectives and Themes

The primary objective of this paper is to examine how the media's selection and portrayal of crimes against women are influenced by factors such as age, race, nationality, class, and physical appearance, rather than the objective details of the crimes themselves, and to analyze the resulting detrimental socio-behavioral effects on society.

  • The impact of race, class, and appearance on media newsworthiness.
  • The role of professional imperatives in shaping crime news.
  • Mechanisms of victim blaming and the perpetuation of gender stereotypes.
  • The discrepancy between media coverage statistics and actual crime rates.
  • The influence of media portrayals on public perception of safety and victim legitimacy.

Excerpt from the Book

Newsworthiness, which can be defined as those qualities journalists believe make an event worth reporting, is hard to measure. As Meyers (1997) states, “there are no hard and fast rules about what constitutes the news, and reporters and editors themselves are often vague about how they separate what to cover from what to ignore within the vast pool of occurrences that could, potentially be news” (p. 18). Therefore, what is on the news is often based on the judgment of journalists and their editors, rather than on a standard or policy.

Since journalists and editors are the ones making the decision as to what is worthy of news coverage; they usually pick stories that are appealing or significant to them. Looking at most news broadcasts, and business executives in general, it is obvious there is a white lens in which the news is delivered. News directors tend to look at white women, and especially attractive white women as someone that they can more closely identify with or have sympathy towards. They relate to people that remind them of their own mothers, sisters or daughters.

Summary of Chapters

1. Introduction: This chapter outlines the thesis that media coverage of crimes against women is disproportionately focused on white, affluent, and attractive victims, influencing public perception in detrimental ways.

2. Defining Newsworthiness and Professional Imperatives: This section explores how journalists determine news value and introduces the eight professional imperatives that guide crime reporting and often compromise factual representation.

3. Media Portrayal and Victim Blaming: This chapter discusses how media framing often positions female victims as deviants, utilizing specific factors to engender blame and reduce public empathy for victims, particularly women of color.

4. Empirical Analysis of Media Coverage: This section utilizes specific research, including a study of Atlanta news broadcasts, to provide statistical evidence of the media's preference for white, upper-class victims over others.

5. Case Study: The Ardeth Wood Incident: This chapter analyzes a specific high-profile murder case in Canada to illustrate the media's tendency to prioritize coverage for victims who align with elite societal profiles.

6. Socio-Behavioral Effects and Media Responsibility: This concluding section examines how media-constructed images reinforce gender stereotypes and calls for more objective, non-commercialized reporting to avoid further marginalization of women.

Keywords

Media bias, newsworthiness, gendered violence, victim blaming, race and media, socio-behavioral effects, crime reporting, stereotypes, media commercialization, social class, public perception, victimization, gender roles, news imperatives, media ethics.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the core argument of this work?

The work argues that news media coverage of violence against women is not determined by the nature of the crime, but by the demographic characteristics of the victim, such as race, class, and physical appearance.

What are the primary themes discussed in the paper?

Central themes include the subjectivity of newsworthiness, the influence of commercial interests on news selection, the systemic bias against women of color, and the psychological impact of media portrayals on societal perceptions of safety.

What is the overarching research goal?

The goal is to demonstrate how media-driven narratives create and maintain harmful biases against women, essentially "re-victimizing" those who do not fit the narrow, privileged profile that the media deems worthy of coverage.

Which scientific methods are utilized?

The author synthesizes extensive qualitative research and secondary data analyses, including comparative studies of news broadcast content and criminological literature on social cognition and media effects.

What topics are covered in the main section?

The main sections cover the definition of newsworthiness, the eight professional imperatives of crime reporting, factors leading to victim blaming, statistical evidence of demographic bias in news, and the role of the media as a vehicle for circulating gendered images.

Which keywords define this publication?

The paper is characterized by terms such as media bias, victim blaming, social construction of gender, and newsworthiness.

How does the author define the "white lens" in media?

It refers to the tendency of news directors to prioritize stories about white, attractive women because they and the audience can more easily identify with or feel empathy for them, mirroring their own families or social circles.

What is the significance of the Ardeth Wood case study?

The case serves as a concrete example of how the media highlights victims who are affluent, educated, and white, thereby reinforcing the belief that such "fairy tale" tragedies are more significant than violence occurring in less privileged contexts.

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Detalles

Título
Women and Violence: Media Making the Call
Subtítulo
A look at the adverse socio-effects resulting from the media’s portrayal of women and violence
Universidad
Ottawa University
Curso
CRM3317 - Crime and Media
Calificación
87%
Autor
Cory Contini (Autor)
Año de publicación
2009
Páginas
10
No. de catálogo
V211154
ISBN (Ebook)
9783656394150
ISBN (Libro)
9783656394310
Idioma
Inglés
Etiqueta
crime media women gender social studies criminology sociology research paper essay
Seguridad del producto
GRIN Publishing Ltd.
Citar trabajo
Cory Contini (Autor), 2009, Women and Violence: Media Making the Call, Múnich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/211154
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Extracto de  10  Páginas
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