Racial Bias In Mass Media

1100 Words3 Pages

The creation of mass media has constructed a crucial means of fostering distorted perceptions about the values and behaviors of other cultures and races. Amongst broadcast, digital and print - media has become one of the largest platforms for information. As the middleman of new information, the media has an implied responsibility to deliver unbiased and candid information to its audience. However, this implied responsibility has been the topic of numerous debates. In this paper I argue that the media willfully omits and alters information in order to perpetuate stereotypes and advance the oppression of minorities. With the introduction of new media in the early twentieth century, society began to witness a new wave of propaganda, communication, …show more content…

According to the Journal of Open Psychology Data it reported that the Project Implicit found that over eighty five percent of white Americans have more than moderate levels of racial bias towards African-Americans (Nosek, Xu, 4.) With racial bias that high it is imperative for the media to understand its effects on the mainstream population. Media bias can be attributed to the white racial frame. By having the majority of the media institution dominated by white American it helps advance the white agenda. It frames all minorities as being inferior and creates an illusion that the white culture is the American norm. The book Racism, Sexism and the Media: The Rise of Class Communication in Multicultural America, gives a in-depth analysis on how white America has already constructed specific narratives and stereotypes for minorities and how they continue to perpetuate them on a mass scale. “Media directed to racial minorities will continue to grow as long as major corporation and advertising agencies divide the mass audience into segments and place the media to penetrate and persuade the racial minority segments.” (Wilson, Gutierrez, Chao, …show more content…

The article concluded that “stereotypical media content shapes the perception of racial groups and social policy”.(Dixon, Williams, 3.) They also have a tendency to “over represent African Americans as criminals and overrepresented Whites as victims and officers. (Dixon, Williams, 24.) By constantly seeing these roles perpetuated in the media we began to believe and think it on a subconscious level. In the Media Studies: A Reader by Sue Thomham, chapter twenty-two Racist Ideologies And the Media, Thomham elaborates on the racist ideologies the media instills and the notions they create about social roles and

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