ABSTRACT

How do gender relations affect the practice of journalism? Despite the star status accorded to some women reporters, and the dramatic increase in the number of women working in journalism, why do men continue to occupy most senior management positions? And why do female readers, viewers and listeners remain as elusive as ever?
News, Gender and Power addresses the pressing questions of how gender shapes the forms, practice, institutions and audiences of journalism. The contributors, who include John Hartley, Pat Holland, Jenny Kitzinger and Myra Macdonald, draw on feminist theory and gender-sensitive critiques to explore media issues such as:
* ownership and control
* employment and occupation status
* the representation of women in the media
* the sexualization of news and audience research.
Within this framework the contributors explore media coverage of:
* the trial of O. J. Simpson
* British beef and the BSE scandal
* the horrific crimes of Fred and Rosemary West
* child sexual abuse and false memory syndrome
* the portrayal of women in TV documentaries such as Modern Times and Cutting Edge.

part |127 pages

The Gender Politics of Journalism

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |16 pages

The Politics of the Smile

‘Soft news' and the sexualisation of the popular press

chapter |14 pages

One of the Girls?

The changing gender of journalism

chapter |24 pages

Juvenation

News, girls and power

chapter |14 pages

‘Mrs Knight Must be Balanced'

Methodological problems in researching early British television

chapter |16 pages

Politicizing the Personal

Women's voices in British television documentaries

part |124 pages

The Gendered Realities of News

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |12 pages

‘Mad Cows and Englishmen'

Gender implications of news reporting on the British beef crisis

chapter |18 pages

The Gender-Politics of News Production

Silenced voices and false memories

chapter |15 pages

Gender and the Agenda

News reporting of child sexual abuse

chapter |14 pages

When the ‘Extraordinary' Becomes ‘Ordinary'

Everyday news of sexual violence

chapter |15 pages

A Family Affair

The British press, sex and the Wests

chapter |15 pages

Crimewatch UK

Keeping women off the streets