Channeling Blackness
Studies on Television and Race in America
Edited by Darnell M. Hunt
Table of Contents
1. Making Sense of Blackness on Television, Darnell M. Hunt
2. The News Media and the Disorders, Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders
3. Encoding and Decoding in the Television Discourse, Stuart Hall
4. Television and Black Consciousness, Molefi Kete Asante
5. Television and the Black Audience: Cultivating Moderate Perspectives on Racial Integration, Paula Matabane
6. White Responses: The Emergence of "Enlightened" Racism, Sut Jhally and Justin Lewis
7. Hearing Anita Hill (and Viewing Bill Cosby), John Fiske
8. A Myth of Assimilation: "Enlightened" Racism and the News, Christopher P. Campbell
9. The Politics of Representation in Network Television, Herman Gray
10. Ralph Farquhar's South Central and Pearl's Place to Play: Why They Failed Before Moesha Hit, Kristal Brent Zook
11. Body and Soul: Physicality, Disciplinarity, and the Overdetermination of Blackness, C. Richard King and Charles Fruehling Springwood
12. "Where My Girls At?" Negotiating Black Womanhood in Music Videos, Rana A. Emerson
13. The Spectacular Consumption of "True" African American Culture: "Whassup with the Budweiser Guys?", Eric King Watts and Mark P. Orbe
14. In a Crisis We Must Have a Sense of Drama: Civil Rights and Televisual Information, Sasha Torres
15. Black Content, White Control, Darnell M. Hunt
Bibliography
Index