Psychologist, director of the American Jewish Committee's Center On Ethnicity,
Behavior and Communications and is co-chairman of the Italian American Media
Institute.
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There is hardly an ethnic group in American society that doesn't feel maligned
by the media. Although analysis of the media's limited viewpoint often focuses
on racial minorities, white ethnics and national minorities also resent
stereotyped, negative or unbalanced portrayals.
What the media that perpetrate them choose to ignore is the extent to which
ethnic consciousness shapes individual identity. Mass media practitioners.
particularly, find it easy to forget their viewers' history as children and
grandchildren of immigrants. They fail to realize how this immigrant heritage
becomes a sharper of values and attitudes that are transmitted through
generations and continue as vital forces in their descendants' lives.
This tendency reflects our new understanding of the role this history plays
in identity. In fact, research in the field of mental health confirms a deep
psychological need for a sense of peoplehood, for historical continuity.
Our ethnicity often plays a major role in determining how we feel about
ourselves, how we work, how we play, how we celebrate holidays and rituals,
how we feel about life, death, and illness.
As a reflector of society's values, the media have a tremendous impact on
the shaping of our personal and group identities. Radio, television, films,
newspapers, magazines and comics can convey the rich texture of a pluralistic
society or they can, directly or indirectly (by omission and distortion),
alter our perceptions of other ethnic groups and reinforce our defensiveness
and ambivalence about our own cultural backgrounds. As an Italian-American,
I've realized this myself when comparing the ethnic invisibility of '50s
television with modern shows that concentrate on Mafia hit men and multiple
biographies of Mussolini. Having squirmed as I watch some of these portrayals,
I can empathize with Arabs who resent being characterized as villainous sheiks,
Jews seen as mendacious moguls or even the current vogue for matching a Russian
accent with a kind of oafish villainy. Although such stereotypes may or may
not serve political ends, they share the cartoonlike isolation of a few traits
that ignore the humanity and variety of a group's members.
What is the impact of ethnic stereotypes on TV and in film on how people
feel about themselves and how they perceive other ethnic groups?
Although research in this area is limited, what is available suggests that
TV and film's portrayal of ethics does have a deleterious effect on perceptions
of self and others. In my own clinical work, I have found that minority children
and adults will often internalize negative stereotypes about their own group.
Other studies have shown that ethnic stereotypes on television and in the
movies can contribute to prejudice against a particular group - especially
when the person is not acquainted with any members of that group.
For example, in one study of television fiction, both white and black children
indicated fairly high levels of acceptance that what they were viewing was
like "real life," including stereotypes about their own ethnic groups.
Teaching Prejudice
In studies of youngsters who commit hate acts - desecration of religious
institutions, racial and anti-Semitic indigents - many youngsters apprehended
reported they got the idea of performing vandalism from news coverage of
similar acts (the copy cat syndrome). They saw media coverage as conferring
recognition and prestige, temporarily raising their low self esteem.
Add to TV fiction and news the rash of "truly tasteless" joke books, radio
call-in shows that invite bigoted calls from listeners, late-night TV hosts
and comedians who denigrate ethnic groups, and the impact on peoples' perceptions
is considerable. While the media cannot be blamed for creating the bigotry,
their insensitive comments establishes a societal norm that gives license
to such attitudes and behavior.
An important cause of distorted and damaging TV stereotypes is the tendency
of some media executives to view ethnic culture as an "immigrant phenomenon,"
a transitional phase in the process of Americanization rather than a continuing
influence on people's language, religious lives, arts, politics, food preferences
and so on. Except for a colorful parade here and a human-interest story there,
even ethnic news is sometimes suspect - "parochial" or "divisive," an
encouragement of the nation's "balkanization."
The media often fail to see that for many Americans, ethnic and religious
traditions are still powerful influences. At times, these traditions conflict
with surrounding values, but they are also sources of strength and understanding.
How they work in second-, third-, and fourth-generation families can provide
a rich store of story ideas and authentic characterizations for writers,
directors, and actors.
Becoming Real
What, then, do ethnic Americans want? Just accurate portrayals of our lives.
"Feedback" to us of a sense of pride in who we are. Appreciation of our special
sadness, joys, achievements, faults, humor, the diversity of our lifestyles
and the common experiences that bind all Americans together as human beings.
And what can ethnic groups do to make the media more culturally sensitive?
To begin with, go beyond complaining and work more closely with media executives
and the creative community. Applaud the industry when it presents high-quality,
culturally authentic programs. Urge media people to use such resources on
the ethnic experience as good novels, plays, short stories, magazine articles,
newspaper stories.
Of course, some stereotyping is unavoidable in a simplified media like television
and ethnic groups should understand that. But the media should also stop
relying on these old negative caricatures. When ethnic groups ask for a balanced
presentation in programs that reach millions of Americans, they are certainly
not trying to censor the media. They only want to be shown as they are -
not better, but surely not worse.
4500Stereotypes
www.terry.uga.edu/~dawndba/4500Stereotypes.htm