The Black Image in the White Mind

kelley kwalker2 at gte.net
Fri May 12 09:34:08 PDT 2000


To introduce their new book The Black Image in the White Mind: Media and Race in America, Robert M. Entman and Andrew Rojecki present some of the statistical evidence of how the mass media treat racial differences.

You may also visit their companion website at www.raceandmedia.com.

"All of us are shaped by popular culture, but few of us understand how, especially when it comes to our society's understanding of race and race relations. Robert Entman and Andrew Rojecki examine television shows, movies, news, and commercials to reveal how the media both reflect and shape our perceptions of race. Their book is accessible and compelling, and their observations startling."—Henry Louis Gates Jr.

"This book has the potential to be the most important book on race in America in the past three decades. It is the first thing I have read on race in many years that strikes me both as finally 'getting it right' and as providing a view of race in America that, if broadly understood, would actually hold some promise of doing good."—David Sears

The Entman-Rojecki Index of Race and the Media

by Robert M. Entman and Andrew Rojecki, authors of The Black Image in the White Mind

1. While Black actors are now more numerous in film, it's an open question as to how well they're being represented. In the top movies of 1996:

Black female movie characters shown using vulgar profanity: 89%. White female movie characters shown using vulgar profanity: 17%. Black female movie characters shown being physically violent: 56%. White female movie characters shown being physically violent: 11%. Black female movie characters shown being restrained: 55%. White female movie characters shown being restrained: 6%.

2. Television ads now show many Blacks and eschew stereotypes. However, hidden patterns of differentiation and distance emerge on close analysis. Not surprisingly, for instance, Blacks do not touch Whites in the ads, but (unlike Whites) they rarely even touch each other, conveying a subtle message of Black skin as taboo. A hierarchy of racial preference is embedded within the casting of commercials. Consider these figures from a large prime time sample:

Of the 105 commercials for autos or trucks that showed only one race, the percentage all-White: 100%. Of the 74 commercials for perfumes that showed only one race, the percentage all-White: 98%. Of the 47 commercials for jewelry or cosmetics that showed only one race, the percentage all-White: 100%.

3. Over 70% of Black characters in the most highly rated TV entertainment shows have professional or management positions. However well-intentioned, this utopian reversal imposes a formal distance between Black and White actors, hobbling the audience's sympathetic imagination. Blacks' supervisory roles isolate their characters from close peer relationships. Among these actors, 92% of interactions with Whites are restricted to job-related tasks.

4. Network news tends to "ghettoize" Blacks. Increasingly, African Americans appear mostly in crime, sports and entertainment stories. Rarely are Blacks shown making an important contribution to the serious business of the nation. Sampling network news shows:

Number of soundbites on foreign affairs uttered by Whites: 99; by Blacks: 1. Number of soundbites on economics uttered by Whites: 86; by Blacks: 1. Number of soundbites on electoral politics uttered by Whites: 79; by Blacks: 0. Number of soundbites on sports and entertainment uttered by Whites: 35; by Blacks: 11. Number of soundbites on crime uttered by Whites: 149; by Blacks: 24.

5. Black defendants are simply treated differently on local TV news from their White counterparts:

Times more likely that a mug shot of the accused will appear in a local TV news report when the defendant is Black rather than White: 4. Times more likely that the accused will be shown physically restrained in a local TV news report when the defendant is Black rather than White: 2. Times less likely that the name of the accused will be shown on screen in a local TV news report when the defendant is Black rather than White: 2

6. "Telegenic" figures aren't always the most representative leaders. Some statistics from 1994:

Black adults stating that Jesse Jackson represents Black people "very well": 40%. Black adults stating that Louis Farrakhan represents Black people "very well": 11%. Black adults stating they had "never heard of" Jesse Jackson: 0%. Black adults stating they had "never heard of" Louis Farrakhan: 22%. Stories about, or soundbites from, Jesse Jackson on ABC World News: 13. Stories about, or soundbites from, Louis Farrakhan on ABC World News: 25.

7. The media sowed discord during the affirmative action debate of the 1990s despite the considerable common ground between Blacks and Whites. Reporters often predicted affirmative action would be one of the key issues in the 1996 election because of the "rage" among Whites.

Percentage of survey respondents naming affirmative action as their top priority in voting against a presidential candidate, 1996: 1%. Percentage of White men ("angry" or not) surveyed who favored affirmative action programs as is or with reforms: 61%. Percentage of White women surveyed who favored affirmative action programs as is or with reforms: 76%. Percentage of White "persons on the street" supporting affirmative action in a sample of network news: 12.5%. Percentage opposing: 87.5%.

http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/210758.html



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