1300 187 187
 

Juan in a Hundred

The Representation of Latinos on Network News

Hardcover

Published: 2nd January 2013
Ships: 7 to 10 business days
RRP $113.99
$102.95
10%
OFF

Latinos constitute the fastest-growing and largest ethnic minority in the United States, yet less than one percent of network news coverage deals with Latinos as the focus of a story. Out of that one percent, even fewer stories are positive in either content or tone. Author of the acclaimed Brown Tide Rising: Metaphors of Latinos in Contemporary American Public Discourse, Otto Santa Ana has completed a comprehensive analysis of this situation, blending quantitative research with semiotic readings and ultimately applying cognitive science and humanist theory to explain the repercussions of this marginal, negative coverage. Santa Ana's choice of network evening news as the foundation for Juan in a Hundred is significant because that medium is currently the single most authoritative and influential source of opinion-generating content. In his 2004 research, Santa Ana calculated that among approximately 12,000 stories airing across four networks (ABC, CBS, CNN, NBC), only 118 dealt with Latinos, a ratio that has remained stagnant over the past fifteen years. Examining the content of the stories, from briefs to features, reveals that Latino-tagged events are apparently only broadcast when national politics or human calamity are involved, and even then, the Latino issue is often tangential to a news story as a whole. On global events involving Latin America, U.S. networks often remain silent while BBC correspondents prepare fully developed, humanizing coverage. The book concludes by demonstrating how this obscurity and misinformation perpetuate maligned perceptions about Latinos. Santa Ana's inspiring calls for reform are poised to change the face of network news in America.

Acknowledgments; Transcription and Semiotic Conventions Prologue: Studying the Network News Coverage on Latinos 1: What US Latino Stories Make the Network News? Section I: Semiotic Analyses of Network News Stories about Latinos 2: Inside-the-Beltway Stories; 3: News Briefs and Feature Stories; 4: News Stories about Caribbean Immigrants; 5: Immigration Policy Stories; 6: Feature-Length News Stories about Mexican Immigrants; Conclusions: Semiotic Analyses of Network News Stories about Latinos Section II: Humanist Theories and Cognitive Modeling of Television News Readings 7: A Cognitive Model to Incorporate Second-Order Signs; 8: Adding Narrative to Semiotics: Myths That Underlie News Stories; 9: Conclusion Appendix A: Summary Table of 118 Network Evening News Stories about Latinos in 2004; Appendix B: Template for Social Semiotic Analysis of Network News Stories (#48); Notes; References; Credits; Index

ISBN: 9780292742604
ISBN-10: 0292742606
Audience: Professional
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Number Of Pages: 317
Published: 2nd January 2013
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Weight (kg): 0.538