Have the Canadian media given feminism a bad name or have they
been among the movement's strongest supporters?
Is journalistic objectivity a myth when it comes to women's
voices, or doesn't it matter?
In this provocative new book -- the first one to examine print
and broadcast news coverage of women's issues in English Canada --
Barbara Freeman explores what the media were saying about women and
their concerns during an important period in our history -- and
why.
"The Satellite Sex" is both a social history and a media case
study of the years 1966-1971, when the feminist movement began once
more to gather support. Women wanted equal treatment under the law,
and they wanted rights they had not gained when they won the vote
many years earlier. In response, the Canadian government appointed
a federal inquiry on the status of women, and hundreds of women
came forward to talk to the Commission about the injustices they
experienced at school, at work, in public life, in their homes, and
even in their bedrooms.
"The Satellite Sex" demonstrates that the print and broadcast
media coverage of women's issues at that time were much more
complex and fragmented than revealed by research in the United
States on the same era. This book, released thirty years after the
Canadian Commission presented its report, also raises questions
about the lack of strong feminist voices in today's news media.
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