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Covering the Body - The Kennedy Assassination, the Media, and the Shaping of Collective Memory (Paperback, New edition)
Loot Price: R818
Discovery Miles 8 180
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Covering the Body - The Kennedy Assassination, the Media, and the Shaping of Collective Memory (Paperback, New edition)
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Images of the assassination of John F. Kennedy are burned deeply
into the memories of millions who watched the events of November
1963 unfold live on television. Never before had America seen an
event of this magnitude as it happened. But what is it we remember?
How did the near chaos of the shooting and its aftermath get
transformed into a seamless story of epic proportions? In this
book, Barbie Zelizer explores the way we learned about and came to
make sense of the killing of the president. Covering the Body (the
title refers to the charge given journalists to follow a president)
is a powerful reassessment of the media's role in shaping our
collective memory of the assassination-at the same time as it used
the assassination coverage to legitimize its own role as official
interpreter of American reality. Of the more than fifty reporters
covering Kennedy in Dallas, no one actually saw the assassination.
And faced with a monumentally important story that was continuously
breaking, most journalists had no time to verify leads or
substantiate reports. Rather, they took discrete moments of their
stories and turned them into one coherent narrative, blurring what
was and was not "professional" about their coverage. Through
incisive analyses of the many accounts and investigations in the
years since the shooting, Zelizer reveals how journalists used the
assassination not just to relay the news but to address the issues
they saw as central to the profession and to promote themselves as
cultural authorities. Indeed, argues Zelizer, these motivations are
still alive and are at the core of the controversy surrounding
Oliver Stone's movie, JFK. At its heart, Covering the Body raises
serious questions about the role of the media in defining our
reality, and shaping our myths and memories. In tracing how
journalists attempted to answer questions that still trouble most
Americans, Zelizer offers a fascinating analysis of the role of the
media as cultural authorities.
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