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It's more than just news: Print media, the Tuskegee Syphilis Study and Collective Memory among African Americans
Journal of Historical Sociology ( IF 0.4 ) Pub Date : 2020-07-30 , DOI: 10.1111/johs.12281
Cleothia Frazier

This study examines how media can influence and shape collective memory through cultural objects such as magazines. Examination of Jet and Ebony magazines' coverage of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, as well as, changes in the narrative over time, reveal potential mechanisms that might have influenced African Americas' collective memory surrounding this event. Data for this study come from news articles about The Tuskegee Syphilis Study in Jet and Ebony magazines from 1972–2016 (N = 49). Content analysis was used to analyze and discover themes in each of the 49 news stories. Findings show that the journalistic coverage of The Tuskegee Syphilis study by these magazines centered around themes of exploitation of uneducated victims, racism and blame, genocide, medical mistrust and deliberate injection with syphilis, reflecting past and current beliefs of African Americans' remembrance of the study.

中文翻译:

这不只是新闻:平面媒体,《塔斯克吉梅毒研究》和非裔美国人的集体记忆

这项研究探讨了媒体如何通过诸如杂志之类的文化对象影响和塑造集体记忆。对JetEbony杂志对“ Tuskegee Syphilis研究”的报道以及叙述随着时间的变化,揭示了可能影响非洲裔美国人对此事件的集体记忆的潜在机制。这项研究的数据来自1972年至2016年在JetEbony杂志上发表的有关《梅毒研究》的新闻报道(N= 49)。内容分析用于分析和发现49个新闻故事中每个主题的主题。调查结果表明,这些杂志对《塔吉克梅毒》研究的新闻报道主要围绕以下主题:剥削未受教育的受害者,种族主义和罪魁祸首,种族灭绝,医疗不信任和故意注射梅毒,反映了非裔美国人对研究的记忆的过去和现在的信念。 。
更新日期:2020-07-30
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