Title: Uttered by condemned prisoners (to Claudius, the emperor
1Media stereotypes
2What does this mean?
- Ave Caesar morituri te salutant!
3In English
- Ave Caesar morituri te salutant!
- Hail, Emperorthose who are about to die salute
you! - Uttered by condemned prisoners (to Claudius, the
emperor) who were manning galleys and about to
take part in a mock naval battle on Lake Fucinus
in AD 52 - Source Suetonius, Life of the Divine Claudius
4The power of representationand the media
- The CS claim
- Media images dont (merely) capture some
pre-existent category distinction - They create (or, at least, reinforce) those very
distinctions - Representationsvisual and linguistic
communicationsare what categorize people to
begin with
5Representations as constitutive of race
- Claim of CS
- Race does not pre-exist its naming (or its
analysis) - That is, race is not a natural, scientific, or
biological category - Not a fact of the objective world
- Rather, it only is a category because we create
it discursively
6Media representations, specifically
- How is race portrayedthus, typedin media texts?
- Visually race is (claimed to be made) visible
via observable physical characteristics - Skin color
- Hair texture
- Shapes/dimensions of facial features
- Body types and body parts
7Typing by race in Crash
- What race is Thandie Newtons character?
- How did you type her?
- How does the Matt Dillon character type her?
- How does the character type herself?
- Why does all of this matter
- In the world of the film?
- In real life (to viewers)?
8From typing to stereotyping
- Like types, stereotypes also rely on the
- simple, vivid, memorable, easily grasped, widely
recognized characteristics about a person
9But types become stereotypes when they
- Reduce
- Reduce everything about the person to those
simple, vivid traits - Exaggerate
- Magnify or caricature the traits
- Simplify
- Strip characteristics of individuality or
subtlety - Fix them
- Without acknowledging changes, developments,
passage of time, societal change
10Lets hear from our old pal, Stuart Hall
11What stereotypes do
- Deploy a strategy of splitting
- They divide the normal from abnormal, acceptable
from unacceptable - And then exclude/expel what falls in the
abnormal or unacceptable
12Thus, stereotyping creates and maintains
- Symbolic order
- Acceptable and unacceptable images
- Social order
- Binding and bonding together of us and
segregation of them - The them group is abjected (thrown out)
- Symbolically, societally, or both
13The paradoxes of stereotyping
- They usually serve as cognitive short-cuts
- Some psychologists define stereotypes as
schemas - Cognitive structures that contain a perceivers
knowledge, beliefs, and expectations about human
groups and their individual members
14But they are not always so simple
- And they can be self-contradictory
- Stereotypes in US of black men
- Not real men, not adults, immature, children
boys - Yet also super-men, super-athletes, over-sexed,
over-endowed hyper-men - Primitive, simple
- Yet also wily savages
15What Hall says about this
- Blacks are trapped by the binary structure of
this stereotype - Children, yet super-men simple, yet wily
- And are obliged to shuttle endlessly between them
- Sometimes even being represented as both poles of
the binary at the same time
16Thus, stereotypes are themselves binary
- They refer as much to what as imagined (or
feared) in fantasy - As to what is real (or derived from typing)
17The cognitive psychology of stereotypes
- One aspect of stereotyping is expectation
- Based on what we do see, we anticipate what we
expect to see - The expectation that we should see additional
features of a schema once we see any features of
the schema is called priming - Smoke primes expectations of ?
18Because stereotypes are so pervasive in media
- They are well learned
- And often automatically and unconsciously
activatedeven if we dont endorse them - So when we encounter someone of a particular
social group - The stereotype (associated characterizations) is
primed - And this influences how we process the situation
19Attribution errors
- When we see someone doing something
- Helping an old lady across the street
- Pushing someone off a bridge
- To what do we attribute their behavior?
- How the person is responding to the specific
situation? - Who the person is as an individual?
- What group the person is a member of?
20Cognitive psychologists have found that
- Inferences we make about peoples behaviors are
biased in favor of our own in groups - If we someone doing something bad
- If the person is in our in group well
attribute the bad behavior to external factors - If the person is in an out group well
attribute it to internal causes
21Similarly
- If we see someone doing something good
- If the person is in our in group, well think
it represents just how the guy is - If the person is in our out group, well think
the person just had to do it, under the
circumstances (not a reflection of who the person
is) - Does anyone remember the Yahoo News captions
post-Katrina?
22Media stereotyping, then
- Quickly bringsthrough words/imagesto audiences
collective consciousness expectations about a
characters - value system
- behavioral expectations
- Allows easy communication of complex ideas
- But what happens when stereotypes are based on
prejudice?
23One definition of prejudice
- A negative attitude toward a person or group
- based upon a social comparison process
- in which the individuals own group is taken as
the positive point of reference (James Jones,
Prejudice and Racism, 1972)
24What does this reflect?
- The use of binaries and marking
- My group is
- Normal
- Superior
- Therefore, the other group must be
- Abnormal (or, at least, different from us)
- Inferior
25Stereotyping of non-whites in US entertainment
and media
- (a whirlwind historical survey)
26Media stereotypes they dont exist in a vacuum!
- Stereotypical representations in media
- change over time
- almost always reflect political, social, and
cultural issues/attitudes of the day - contribute to (and/or reinforce) pre-existing
stereotypical attitudes
27The big question
- Do media stereotypes create attitudes that did
not exist in the first place? - (Some scholarship suggests the answer is yes)
28Variety of stereotyping strategies over time
- Invisibility
- Race (i.e., other races) as problem
- Other object, not subject
- Assimilationism
- Ambiguity
- New aesthetics
29Quick survey by group/type
- Native Americans
- Latinos (and Hispanic Americans)
- Asians (and Asian Americans)
- Black people (Africans African Americans)
30Native Americans
- The first people with whom white Europeans coming
to this continent (1490s) had to co-exist - How those Europeans described NAs
- Primitive
- Innocent
- Generous (shared food)
- Dark and handsome in appearance
31The noble savage
- All the stuff on the last slide (primitive,
innocent, generous, handsome) struck Europeans as
noble - At the same time, Europeans commented on natives
- Nudity
- Open sexual relationships
- Cannibalism
- Hence, savage
321800s (in literature, newspapers)
- Treatment as monolithic (no distinctions made
among 2000 cultures, languages, etc.) - Indian problem
- Impediment to white expansion (and thus to
progress and civilization) and manifest
destiny - Translations to stage plays in early 1900s
33Early 20th-century film images
- Fears of miscegenation in silents (1910s)
- Our white women shall be guarded
- White actors play most Native roles
- Directors found it difficult to teach Native
actors how to act Indian!
341940s historical/Westerns
- Generic Indian stereotype solidified
- Feathers, beads, fringe, halting accent
- Warriors attacking white people
35Mid-century shifts
- 1950s-60s movies
- White America feels guilt
- Hollywood movies attempt to purge guilt
- 1950s TV
- Tonto Lone Rangers faithful companion
- Positive fought for justice and American Way
- Negative secondary status, stereotypical
appearance, accent, clothing
36And now?
- Mostly, invisibility
- In movies, TV shows, video games
37Latinos/Hispanics
- Invisible in North American literature until
mid-1800s - Coinciding with battles for Mexican and Texan
independence, Mexicans portrayed as - Cruel, inhuman
- Lazy and/or ignorant
- Unclean (greasers)
- (But sometimes Mexican women were described
favorably)
38From Mexican to other Hispanic portrayals
- Generally, little or no differentiation in US
media between Mexicans, Guatemalans, Hondurans,
Cubans, Puerto Ricans, (Costa Ricans??), etc.,
etc. - greaser image migrates from Mexicans to just
about all other Spanish-speaking cultures - Silent films Tony the Greaser (1911), The
Greasers Revenge (1914)
39Latinos/Hispanics in 1930s-40s
- 1930s Hollywood responds to 1922 ban of US
movies by Mexican government - And sympathetic reactions by other Latin American
nations - Hispanic movie males reinvented as Latin lovers
- Although often played by non-Latinos!
- Other traits quick temper, spitfire, unstable,
dishonorable
40Mid-century film TV
- Latino greasers evolve into gang members
(1960s West Side Story, etc.) - Positive film portrayals dont appear until 1980s
(La Bamba, Milagro Beanfield Wari) - 1950s TV Cisco Kid (1950s adventure hero), Desi
Arnaz, Zorro - But mostly supporting characters, criminals,
servants
41Advances and retreats
- 1970s-80s a few shows with Hispanic leads
- Chico and the Man, Miami Vice, L.A. Law
- More and more Hispanic performers outing
themselves after passing for white - Raquel Welch, Martin Sheen, Linda Ronstadt
- 2003 NBCs Kingpin about Mexican drug lord
42Asians
- Asian immigration fairly limited before 1900
- White American attitudes toward Chinese and
Japanese (2 biggest immigrant groups) - All Asians lumped together
- yellow peril deceitful, devious, vicious,
threat to national security - Resentment (because many Chinese immigrants had
jobsalbeit low-level labor)
43Asian stereotypes in media texts
- 1916 film The Yellow Menace
- Series of Dr. Fu Manchu films (Chinese
villainbut played by white actor) - Mysterious East
- China and its people characterized by vice,
corruption, prostitution, drug use (opium)
44Effects of WW2
- Japanese take over as specific yellow peril
- Cruel, inflictors of torture
- But by 1950s-60s, as Japan solidifies role as US
ally - Portrayals are more sensitive, positive
- Still, inter-racial romances usually come to bad
end
45Flip side of Asian portrayals
- Aspects of model minority
- Asians in film/TV portrayed as polite, bowing,
wise - So, other than fully manly
- And, if female, then gracious and submissiveand
still mysterious
46Economic issues
- Hollywood, the TV industry, and the advertising
industry - Slow to recognize that non-white groups are
important markets - Entertainment industry responds to economic
pressure - And also to political statements
47Anti-prejudice advocacy groups target media
companies
- NAACP (National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People) - Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith
- Gay Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation
- National Council of La Raza
- American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee
- National Italian-American Foundation
48Black media stereotypes
- Roots in colonial period (Puritans, settlers in
Virginia) - Color white associated with goodness, purity,
cleanliness - Color black associated with evil, impurity,
filth, spiritual darkness
49Minstrel shows
- Roots in 1830s-40s New York (Buffalo, NYC)
- Irish immigrantswho were classified as other
than whiteperformed shows in blackface - Musical numbers
- Comedic skits
- Blacks not allowed to attend or perform!
50Examples of minstrel show texts
- In Eric Lotts Love and Theft
51Post-Civil War literature
- Portrayals motivated by political/social stances
- Resistance to end of slavery
- Resistance to legal equality
- Blacks portrayed as lazy, stupid, sexually
immoral, fond of alcohol - And thus not fully humanor deserving of equality
52D.W. Griffiths pro-KKK Birth of a Nation (1915)
- NAACP protests films exhibition in NYC and
Boston - The Negro is represented either as an ignorant
fool, a vicious rapist, a venal and unscrupulous
politician, or a faithful but doddering idiot
53Blacks in other early movies
- Silent era
- The Wooing and Wedding of a Coon (1905)
- The Nigger (1915)
- First talkie The Jazz Singer (1927)
- Starred white actor Al Jolson in blackface
54Early sound era (late 20s-40s)
- Less overtly racist
- But blacks, when shown, knew their place
- Servants, maids, train porters
- Entertainers (of white people) amusing singers,
dancers - Happy, faithful slaves (or servants)
- Broadly comedic characters
55Changing tide? 1950s?
- Hollywood films start exploring discrimination
- 1960s sophisticated, heroic black male (Sidney
Poitier, Harry Belafonte) - 1970s Blaxploitation films (Shaft, Superfly,
Sweet Sweetbacks Baadasssss Song ) exploiting
more exotic aspects of black inner-city life
561980s and 90s
- 1980s resurgence of Black stars with crossover
appeal - Eddie Murphy, Whoopi Goldberg
- 1990s harsh films in urban settings
- Boyz N the Hood, Jungle Fever, New Jack City
571990s-2000s Hollywood
- Many would-be independent black filmmakers
scooped up by ever-greedy Hollywood - Mainstream Hollywood aware of lucrative
African-American film market - Yet cautious (selective) in its financial backing
and international distribution of black-produced
films
58Major financial successes
- Spike Lees films Shes Gotta Have It (1986), Do
the Right Thing (1989), He Got Game (1998) - Forest Whitakers Waiting to Exhale (1995)
- Other successful black directors
- John Singleton, Robert Townsend
59Another recent trend black angels (spiritually
superior godly?)
- Morgan Freeman as God (Bruce Almighty, 2000)
- Morgan Freeman as coach (Million Dollar Baby,
2004) - Morgan Freeman as Lucius Fox (Batman Begins,
2005) - Whoopi Goldberg as fake (?) psychic (Ghost, 1990)
- Cuba Gooding Jr. as an angel (What Dreams May
Come, 1998)
60More black angels
- Djimon Hounsou as angelic neighbor (In America,
2003) - Gloria Foster as oracle (The Matrix, 1999)
- Chris Rock as Rufus, the 13th apostle (Dogma,
1999) - Will Smith as Bagger Vance (Legend of Bagger
Vance, 2000) - John Coffey as angelic prisoner (The Green Mile,
1999) - Denzel Washington (almost always)
61How to interpret black angels?
- Film scholar Linda Williams
- Such movies allow white audiences to feel good
about themselves because they feel so much
compassion for (often suffering) black characters - Spike Lee interprets John Coffeys Green Mile
character as modern-day equivalent of old
grateful slave
62Krin Gabbards take
- Contemporary black angels based on
well-established notion that black people are
highly spiritual beings - Yet magical black characters in recent films
dont belong to African-American cultures - They exist in world uncontaminated by politics,
prejudice, even death
63Grabbard (ctd.)
- Such films suggest most white Americans are
incapable of living comfortably with black
Americans - Black angels are outside everyday world of white
Americans - (not counting sports and popular music)
- Only enter white America when white characters
need supernatural help
64Spike Lees Bamboozled (2000)
- A reminder of 200 years of black stereotyping
- A comment/question about today
- Are offensive racial images solely of the past?
- How do contemporary media perpetuate stereotypes
based on race?
65Alison Swans Mixing Nia (1998)
- Why have you never heard of this film?
- Judged to be commercially inviable
- To producers of universal independent films
too black to be universal - To Hollywood distributors of Black independent
films not black enough! - An authentic black film doesnt involve
multiracial characters or interracial
relationships!