Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Allan, Stuart
In: Brazilian journalism research, 10, 2015, 2, p. 188-203
published:
Associacao Brasileira de Pesquisadores de Jornalismo
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
Physical Description: 188-203
ISSN: 1981-9854
1808-4079
DOI: 10.25200/bjr.v10n2.2014.776
published in: Brazilian journalism research
Language: Undetermined
Subjects:
Collection: Associacao Brasileira de Pesquisadores de Jornalismo (CrossRef)
Table of Contents

<jats:p>In seeking to render problematic traditional conceptions of journalistic identity, this article critiques the seemingly natural, even ‘common sensical’ structures of social exclusion recurrently underpinning its formulation. More specifically, it explores, firstly, a series of insights provided by feminist and gender-sensitive critiques of journal­ism. In assessing the typically subtle imperatives of sexism in news reporting, it consid­ers the extent to which journalistic identity continues to be defined within the day-to-day ‘macho culture’ of the newsroom, where female journalists’ perceptions of sexual dis­crimination typically vary sharply from those held by their male colleagues. Secondly, at­tention turns to the issue of ethnic diversity, where the need to deconstruct the racialised projection of ‘us and them’ dichotomies precisely as they are taken-up and re-inflected in news reporting is shown to be of pressing concern. In bringing together these respec­tive set of debates, primarily from British and US contexts, this article aims to contribute to conceptual efforts to further unravel the ways in which journalists’ routine, everyday choices about what to report – how best to do it, and why –involves them in a politics of mediation, one where all too often a culture of othering proves significant.</jats:p>