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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page essay that looks at the current state of media and its obsession with stereotypical images. The paper reviews social theory relating to image, racial portrayals in the media, and the portrayal of women in the media—and posits that in the United States, legitimate media is currently underground. Bibliography cites 7 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Steromed.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Communications" (Stein, 44). Part of the San Francisco program representing a transformed image for racial and other minorities in the media will "be to speak out against inappropriate media images
that foster stereotypes about our communities," added Betsy Bayha of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association (Stein, 44). Its about time-but will their efforts succeed?
The student researching this paper should recognize the fact that for 25 years, women have been trying to change the image portrayed of them, but
25 years later, accepted female roles are for minxes, mothers, bitches, and prostitutes. Black men are still portrayed as happy bellhops, Mexicans are still portrayed as bean pickers and
bandits, and gays and lesbians are portrayed as whiney rich folks or 1980s punks. Of course-it pays-but all of these images are false. Yet, the media insists on retaining
these stereotypical images for their top stories and advertisements-and this unbroken cycle is causing permanent sociological harm. In its latest regression, Hollywood is currently recreating Victorian images-and women thought bringing
Donna Reed back was bad news! Social theory research provides that all forms of media-have long-lasting effects on self-images adopted by individuals.
The social ramifications of this process can be devastating. In an era when some long-term criminals are being found innocent of their crimes because of DNA testing and other
police methods-and at a time when studies show that crime and drug abuse by blacks fallen below that of whites-the image of blacks as criminals remains. In a 1997
study Jon Hurwitz and Mark Peffley found "a strong relationship between whites images of African-Americans and judgments of crime and punishment . . . and conclude[d] that much of public
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