Sunday, 31 January 2010

Bibliography

Websites

1. http://www.aimovement.org/ncrsm/index.html
2. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,900397,00.html
3. http://1968blackpowersalute.blogspot.com/
4. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,900397,00.html
5. http://www.cpgb-ml.org/index.php?secName=proletarian&subName=display&art=445
6. http://www.welti.ch/wp-content/uploads/2007/11/achtung_surrender_klein.jpg
7. http://www.sillitoe-uk.net/media/html/Alina.pdf
8. http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2004/apr/22/football.raceintheuk
9. http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2004/apr/25/race.football
10. http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2009/may/18/gordon-brown-2018-world-cup-england
11. http://www.cnbc.com/id/34386050
12. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/merseyside/3588112.stm

Works Cited

1. Ferguson, Robert. Representing Race: Ideology, Identity and the Media. London: Arnold Publishers, 1998. p.134-p.138
2. Mackinnon, Kenneth. Representing Men: Maleness and Masculinity in the Media (Arnold Publication). London: A Hodder Arnold Publication, 2003. P.176

Works Consulted

1. Bennett, Peter, Jerry Slater, and Peter Wall. A2 Media Studies: The Essential Introduction for Aqa (Essentials). 2 ed. New York: Routledge, 2010.
2. Gorman, Lyn, and David Mclean. Media and Society in the Twentieth Century: A Historical Introduction. New York, NY: Wiley, 2002.
3. Ferguson, Robert. Representing Race: Ideology, Identity and the Media. London: Arnold Publishers, 1998.
4. Gorman, Lyn, and David Mclean. Media and Society in the Twentieth Century: A Historical Introduction. New York, NY: Wiley, 2002.
5. Mackinnon, Kenneth. Representing Men: Maleness and Masculinity in the Media (Arnold Publication). London: A Hodder Arnold Publication, 2003.
6. Said, Edward W.. Culture and Imperialism. 1994. Reprint, New York: Vintage, 1994.

Sunday, 24 January 2010

To what extent is there a distinction between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes in sport media today?

“F***ing lazy thick n***er”. To what extent is there a distinction between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes in sport media today?

In this post-colonialist society, ethnic minorities have had a significant role in sports today than they had done before. The dawn of this approach was from the 70s and 80s, where infamous sports icons, such as O.J. Simpson and Walton Payne, had begun to break barriers between ethnic minorities and the majority. Now, there are a lot of ethnic athletes (from Didier Drogba to Tiger Woods).

Yet, there is still dissimilarity between how they are depicted in the media, in comparison to the majority of athletes not from an ethnic background. Ferguson (1998), argues that “during World Cup games, we tend to become nationalist”.[1] It is this ideology of colonialism that still exists in our post-colonialist society. This essay will critically analyse evidence to judge to what extent does the media differentiate a difference between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes.

The media has a big stimulus on sports. They play a big role on occasions of significant sporting events. Althusser argues that “sport played a big role in the cultural apparatus through chauvinism. The cultural apparatus is an ideological state apparatus where Althusser argues the bourgeoisie use it to control the working class. The media, owned by the bourgeoisie, use chauvinism in big sporting events”[2] for example the World Cup.

Another example of this is in North America, where the governments have been condemned for their confined approach and colonialist stance. Sport teams in America use Native Americans as mascots for their teams. It could be argued that this would then prevent a progressive approach to the representation of Native Americans, keeping them at the rear so as to justify inhabiting their land. This was shown through the New York Post, where a game between New York and Cleveland baseball acquired the controversial headline of "Take the Tribe and Scalp 'Em”.[3] This connotes that the media still have racist and colonialist attitudes towards the minority race, whether it is premeditated or subliminal.

This links in with the theories of colonialism and post-colonialism. It is apparent that ethnic minority athletes do have bigger roles in sports, and that in the media they are attaining a better and more constructive representation in this Western globalised society. This links in with the post-colonialism due to the fact that the media has provided a more constructive representation of ethnic minority athletes.

Nevertheless, the theory of colonialism does still exist. The media does on occasion portray colonialist depictions of ethnic minority athletes. Williams (1990) argues that “throughout the media, in reference to sports, women and people from ethnic groups where referred to, by commentators, by their first names. This was opposed to white men who were referred to by either their last name or their full name”[4] Although not a direct attack of racism, it does connote the colonialist views of the media taking the ethnic minorities less seriously, which is a residue of the effect of colonialist societies.

This universal racial representation of the media can be connoted back to the media’s response to the 1968 Olympic Games, when Tommie Smith and John Carlos celebrated their win by doing the ‘black power salute’.[5] The media, instantaneously, responded pessimistically, indicating subtle racial hatred towards the two athletes, notwithstanding the Civil Rights Act 1968 that was enforced just months before.

The Los Angeles Times called it a “Nazi-like support”.[6] In conjunction to this approach was the reaction of the Time Magazine’s reaction in conjunction, denigrating the ‘unacceptable’ and ‘petty’ behaviour of both athletes. They referred to the situation by publishing a picture of the Olympics logo with the slogan “Angrier, nastier, uglier", scorning the Olympic slogan.[7] These downbeat connotations had a negative effect of ethnic minorities, not only in America, but on an international level.

This colonialist mind-set during the time was evident in Australia, where Peter Norman, runner up to Tommie Smith, was casted out of the Australian media for backing the salutation.[8] These implications, while signifying Zeitgeist of that particular time, also represented that while the Civil Rights Act 1968 attempted to eradicate racism and discrimination in America, there is still a somewhat thick glass barrier that ethnic minorities cannot break through, especially with the discouraging influence of the media.

This treatment from the media, while not as severe, changed forms during the 1996 European Championships. Robert Ferguson (1998) argued that the Daily Mirror’s coverage of England vs. Germany during the 1996 European Championships was example that the media was a nationalist entity. [9] While it was not coherently directed towards the race of athletes, it was still negatively portraying German ethnic minorities in England, due to the negative connotations of the Germany national team.

The Daily Mirror enthusiastically used three-quarters of their front page newspaper to display a photo-montage of the shouting or smiling heads of two English football players, Stuart Pearce and Paul Gascoigne, whilst clad in steel helmets worn by British troops in the Second World War. The two main words of the headline read simply: ACHTUNG! SURRDENER.[10] This clearly indicates that there is, yet, a disparity between ethnic minorities and the majority of athletes in regards to race and nationality.

This comes into play only when they pose a threat to England fans, whether it is through a World Cup or Olympics. The media does create a big distinction, a glass ceiling that they cannot breakthrough in our globalised world even when it was 28 years after the media’s response to the 1968 Olympics black power salute. Ferguson argues that “Klinsmann is referred to as the ‘former Spurs star’, for though he had become one of the ‘enemy’ Klinsmann was favourite with many of the English football fans”.[11] This negative representation of Klinsmann shows that there was a distinction between ethnic minorities in football and majority of other footballers during the 90s. It is apparent that this so-called post-colonialist approach has failed to mould itself in modern day society and is simply a façade to keep up appearances.

It’s not just Britain and America where the media represents nationalism and attacks other countries in big sporting events. Moragas Spa et al argue that “local circumstances can greatly colour the experience of a global event like the Olympic games”,[12] which was evident in the 1998 World Cup when French newspapers “offered their readers a variety of explanations as to why French fans were not ardent enough as spectators, including that France and the French were not underdeveloped enough”.[13]

However, in spite of these nationalist connotations occurring in the 90s, in 2004 there has been evidence of racial and colonialist views from the media when Ron Atkinson referred Chelsea player Marcel Desailly as a “fucking, lazy, thick nigger”.[14] Despite the fact that he assumed he was off-air, it clearly demonstrates the indirect, harsh reality of the media’s opinion of ethnic minorities through their, at the time, pundit for ITV.

However, this can be counter argued as “he resigned from his job at ITV. He had to give up his column in the Guardian. And he lost a fortune - as much as £1 million - when other commercial projects were ditched by the companies he was associated with."[15] It does show that post-colonialist and globalised world media are taking solemn action against racism and trying to prevent it, at the same time the old colonialist ideologies still remain despite this. But is this because it is what the media wishes to genuinely portray, or is it simply a way to disguise such hiccups so as to not lose profit?

This debate about if the media represents post colonialist or colonialist views towards athletes can be applied to the 2006 American football movie “Gridiron Gang”. The movie follows a gang of prison inmates where they are selected to play American football against to become good citizens. The connotations of the movie are a mix of post-colonialism and colonialism, in the fact that the majority of the main stars in the movie are ethnic minorities, but the social connotations from the movie are that the prisoners who turn athletes are given a “second chance” through sports.

The historical connotations of this type of narrative in sport movies have been going on for quite a while. However at the end of the movie, the prisoners change their life around and become better people for society thanks to sports. This does give a negative representation of ethnic minorities, in the fact that some ethnic minorities can be seen as have had a second chance and also colonialist representations that the media carry.

The 1986 movie ‘Wildcats’ has a similar narrative, only this time instead of prisoners, it is focused on badly behave pupils. They are also given a “second chance” through sports which does affect how people see ethnic minorities from an outside standpoint. Marxists would argue that the political reason for this is so that the upper-class can maintain their colonialist representation on the ethnic minorities and also keep them oppressed through alienation. These dominant colonialist representations that have been present in sport movies, from ‘The Longest Yard’ to ‘Gridiron Gang’, connote that there are underlying differences in the film industry between ethnic minorities and the rest of the athletes who are born in western countries.

There are many possible reasons for this same representation still being used twenty years later in the same sport movie genre in our more globalised world. Both of the writers who wrote the movie are of white descent, and would not have a truthful account of how and what it is for an ethnic minority athletes. This underrepresentation was also because of the institution, Columbia Pictures, not having enough ethnic minority workers to help build an accurate picture. This will cause people to scrutinise ethnic minorities as “having a second chance” in terms of being able to participate in sports, and therefore is imperative.

Another theory that can be applied to this debate of whether there is a distinction between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes in sport media today is the theory of Marxism. Althusser (1971) argues that “the role of sport in chauvinism is of the first importance as part of the cultural apparatus.”[16] The cultural apparatus is a part of the ideological apparatus, the tool the upper-class use to control the working classes.

Althusser argues that, through the cultural apparatus, the upper classes use nationalism to give morale to the working classes to try and blind them of their oppression. This plays into sports because nationalism for countries, chauvinism, is used for this purpose. That is why whenever there is a world cup the government backs England to do well, and even the Prime Minister gets involved.[17] This could mean that some of the British public would alienate the ethnic minority athletes, which was evident in the Daily Mirror article in 1996.

This colonialist and post-colonialist debate to what extent there is a distinction between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes extends to 2009, the Tiger Woods sex scandal. In 2009 he was involved in a sex scandal which caught the media by storm and lead to him taking an indefinite hiatus from Professional Golf[18] This story gained a lot of publicity around the world, and painted Woods in a negative light, giving him a negative representation.

However, another sex scandal involving Wayne Rooney got very little media attention. This case was much worst as it involved prostitution and he was a teenager at the time.[19] These contrasts between the two ethnicities of the athletes and the media response to both of them connotes the media does distinguishes ethnic minorities and athletes of white decent.

In conclusion, since the 1960s the media has been distinguishing between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes. The colonialist ideologies that the media had during that Zeitgeist have not been completely eradicated in our ‘proud’ post-colonialist society. As Ferguson argues, this is evident through the media’s coverage of the 1996 European Championship and also the same, to some-what colonialist, narrative of Gridiron Gang and the genre of Sport movies have shown this. Ethnic minority athletes are, without a doubt, trapped behind a glass barrier, which begs the questions as to when the media will be able to portray a similar representation of them and the majority of other athletes.



[1] Ferguson, R (1998). Representing "Race". London: Arnold. p134.

[2] Ibid

[3] http://www.aimovement.org/ncrsm/index.html

[4] MacKinnan, K (2003). Representing Men. London: Arnold. p. 176.

[5] http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,900397,00.html

[7] http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,900397,00.html

[9] Ferguson, R (1998). Representing "Race". London: Arnold. p. 135.

[11] Ferguson, R (1998). Representing "Race". London: Arnold. p. 137.

[12] http://www.sillitoe-uk.net/media/html/Alina.pdf

[13] ibid

[14] http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2004/apr/22/football.raceintheuk

[15] http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2004/apr/25/race.football

[16] Ferguson, R (1998). Representing "Race". London: Arnold. p. 134.

[17] http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2009/may/18/gordon-brown-2018-world-cup-england

[18] http://www.cnbc.com/id/34386050

[19] http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/merseyside/3588112.stm

Sunday, 3 January 2010

Task 6

To what extent is there a distinction between ethnic minorities and the majoirty of other athletes in sport media today?

In our post-colonialist society ethnic minorities have had a larger role in sports today than they had done before. They are represented more from the 70s and 80s, where only a handful of ethnic minorities (from O.J. Simpson to Walton Payne) and now there are a lot of ethnic athletes (from Didier Drogba to Tiger Woods) however there is still a distinction between how they are portrayed to the media compared to the majority of athletes born in England and not from ethnic decent. Ferguson, for example, argues that during World Cup games we tend to become nationalist. It's this ideology of colonialism still existing in our post-colonialist society. This essay will balance the argument and judge to what extent the media distinguished a difference between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes.

The media has a big influence in sports. They play a big part in if a big sporting event is going to happen. Althusser argued that sport played a big role in the cultural apparatus through chauvinism. The cultural apparatus is an ideological state apparatus where Althusser argues the bourgeoisie use it to control the working class. The media, owned by the bourgeoisie, use chauvinism in big sporting event, for example the world cup. Another example of this is in North America, where the government have been criticised by having colonialist views. Sport teams in America use Native Americans as mascots for their teams. It could be argued that this would then keep representations of Native Americans low, and justify taking their land. This was then shown through the New York Post, where a game between New York and Cleveland baseball, had "Take the Tribe and Scalp 'Em." as its headline.
This connoted the media still having racist attitudes towards ethnic minorities.

Bibliography:

Ferguson, Robert- 1998- Representing "Race" -London-Arnold

Probert, David and Graham, Andrew (2008): Advance Media Studies. Oxfordshire; Phillipalan retailers

MacKinnan, Kenneth (2003) Representing Men. London; Arnold

Casey, Bernadette; Casey, Neil; Calvert, Ben; French, Liam and Lewis, Justin. (2002). Television studies: they key concepts. London; Routledge (227-228)

Creeber, Glen (2004). Fifty Key television programmes. London; Arnold. (85-88)


Task 5

Photobucket

Saturday, 2 January 2010

Task 4

Atkinson quits over racist slur

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2004/apr/22/football.raceintheuk

"Referring to the underwhelming performance of the French defender, Atkinson said: "He's what is known in some schools as a fucking lazy thick nigger." Atkinson's conversation was picked up by microphones that should have been switched off once the broadcast from the stadium had concluded."

This is useful as it connotes that there is a big difference between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes in Sports today, ethnic minorities are still racially abused in the media. The media does look at the two differently, which is why Atkinson probably made the slur anyway.

Racist fans 'should go to prison'

http://www.thevisitor.co.uk/blackpool-news/Racist-fans-39should-go-to.5683253.jp

"And now Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp has let rip against the thugs who he says threaten to ruin the sport.

He said: "That is disgusting – there's no place for that in the game. Surely we can't have that sort of behaviour now? Anyone who does it should be put in prison – not banned from football.
"Stick them where they belong, in the nut-house. It's wrong." "

This is useful as it’s connotes that actual members of the sport institution are aware that there is a difference, i.e. racism. But also shows how they want change so that the difference is gone from Sport media.

'What I said was racist - but I'm not a racist. I am an idiot'

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2004/apr/25/race.football

"He resigned from his job at ITV. He had to give up his column in the Guardian. And he lost a fortune - as much as £1 million - when other commercial projects were ditched by the companies he was associated with."


It’s significant because it connotes that not always is the difference negative, with the media actually against racism and attempting to get rid of the gap between athletes.


AMERICAN INDIANS ARE PEOPLE, NOT MASCOTS

http://www.aimovement.org/ncrsm/index.html

"Last year during the media hype that surrounded the baseball playoff games between New York and Cleveland, the New York Post caught up in the hype covered its front page with the headline, "Take the Tribe and Scalp 'Em." Little concern was shown for the Indian children, or community living in New York City, or around the country"

It shows how in America the media represent American Indians as Mascots for sports teams. While it isn’t Britain it’s a good reference.

Racism among sports fans extends beyond the loudest voice among them

http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/columnists/20031003shelly1003p1.asp

" The fact that Limbaugh thinks of Mc-Nabb as a "black quarterback" gives him away. It's too bad we aren't past that. He says it's the media who treat McNabb differently, but he is the one defining McNabb by his skin color. Are white guys like the Steelers' Tommy Maddox "regular quarterbacks" to Limbaugh?"

Shows how the media, who argue for equality, are in fact racist and look down at people of different skin colour, in this case, athletes. It may be 2003 but It is useful as a footnote.


America's Mishandling of the Donovan McNabb-Rush Limbaugh Controversy

http://www.popmatters.com/sports/features/031022-mcnabb-rush.shtml

"Limbaugh, a new hire to the ESPN football crew, argued that McNabb was an overrated quarterback who has benefited more from a strong defense and a liberal media determined to see an African American quarterback succeed in the NFL than actual ability."

Shows how the media station showing a NFL game had colonialist and racist views thanks to a remark by a commentator. Useful as it’s an example of the media distinguishing between ethnicities.

Media, Stereotypes and the Perpetuation of Racism in Canada

http://www.usask.ca/education/coursework/802papers/crawford/jamesc.html

"The black youth who was unsuccessful in making it in professional sports, failed because of personal failings. The effect on the audience is to confirm existing stereotypes of black youth - that when given a chance, most blacks would rather be hanging around with the gang, etc. A social commentary interrogating why professional sports is one of the few places that blacks can succeed in life is completely ignored. Instead, the message is that blacks need to conform or else stay within their racial group where they will not experience failure."

This is the same with the historical and current texts that I am looking at, this follows the same "general" guidelines. Goes into a lot of detail between the links between racism and sports and how it’s represented in the Media, however it’s only in Canada so I won’t gather a lot of quotes from there just a few.

The portrayal of Ethnic, Ethnicity and Nationality in advertised international sport events

http://www.la84foundation.org/9arr/ResearchReports/ResearchReport4.htm

"Race almost never was mentioned by commentators. A personal interview segment focusing on Native American Ryneldi Bycenti was one notable exception. There were a few instances when athletes described themselves in terms of their racial identity. In the vast majority of cases, however, we found no overt narrative references to race.

Ethnicity, however, occasionally was mentioned by commentators. For example, there was an extended exploration of the Albanian heritage of a United States born swimmer who competed for Albania in the 1992 Barcelona Games. Ethnicity was more likely to be acknowledged by commentators if it connected with some history of ethnic conflict. Bosnian runner, Mirsada Buric, was discussed against the backdrop of ethnic conflict in her country. The family of gold medalist swimmer Pablo Morales was said to have immigrated to the United States in order to escape the political repression and squalor of Cuba in the 1950s."

Very good as it shows how underrepresented Black people are in other media positions to do with sports rather than being athletes, for example a huge lack of ethnic minority commentators or critics so, in terms of racial experience, they are not giving the full picture.

Minorities in Sport Identity, Representation, Participation and Politics

http://org.uib.no/imer/14Nordic/workshops/Minorities_in_sport/index.htm

"n sport journalism, thus, ethnic minority athletes are described as individual athletes more than minority members. Local and national sport administrations meanwhile relate to minority populations in various ways – from active recruitment policies, anti-racist campaigns, to neglect. A general tendency, however, is that sports organisations try to communicate that they, more than other civil society organisations, are especially apt at the job of “integrating” immigrants and ethnic minorities. "


Uses direct examples of what institutions say about the split of athletes, by referring to ethnic minorities as “individual athletes” which helps keep the difference in tact.

Sport and the Media: The Emergence of a Major Field

http://www.sillitoe-uk.net/media/html/Alina.pdf

"The results of this extensive
study showed, on the one hand, that ‘producers of televised
international athletic events generally are attuned to issues of racial
representation and cultural diversity’ – a fact they attribute to some
extent to growing awareness of related issues in the USA. However,
while previously-documented patterns of media representation of
black athletes were being addressed, they did find the treatment of
‘Asian’ athletes was ‘biased’."


The best link, has everything I would need, talks about how the media represents ethnic minorities differently and also links it to National Pride, where we would follow one team for example.

Task 3

My Historical Text that I am looking at is the response of the media to the 1968 Olympics "Black Power Salute". The article below is significant as it shows that the media did see a huge difference between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes. Back then it was more apparent and not so discrete. as it could be nowadays. The media response to the two black olympic sprinters was negative.

"The Los Angeles Times described the salute by Carlos and Smith as a “Nazi-like support”."

" Time magazine also ran a picture of the Olympic symbol which has a motto of “Faster, Higher, Stronger” and they replaced the motto on the symbol with the words “Angrier, Nastier, Uglier”. The magazine article even called their protest “petty”. These two reports were evidence that the silent protest was not viewed by the media as appropriate for the event, even if the attention was much needed."

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,900397,00.html- The actual article

" Even Peter Norman, the Australian who was sympathetic to his competitors’ protest, was reprimanded by his country’s Olympic authorities and cast out by the Australian media (themselves no strangers to racism and colonial oppression)."

The times magazine connotes that during the 60s colonialist ideas were the dominant ideas oposed to the post-colonialist ideas that float around in our globalised world.

Task 2

Ferguson, Robert- 1998- Representing "Race" -London-Arnold

“Althusser noted that the role of sport in chauvinism is of the first importance as part of the cultural apparatus (Althusser, 1871b. p154)”

Chauvinism is the over exaggeration of being patriotic. It’s important as it’s used in sports, and as Althusser argues, is just another apparatus in the ideological state apparatus. It’s useful because it shows that the media does take culture in to account when discussing sports.


“…I chose for this example and the chauvinism bordering on racism is that of the Daily Mirror towards the Germans at the time of the European Championship in 1996. It will be apparent from the example that the use of the term “race” in this book is one which encompasses more than the racism and power struggles which occur on the axis of ‘white’ versus ‘others’. It includes those forms of racism which have also built and sustained the required environment to justify war, and genocide where ‘racial purity’ not colour is the prime issue.”

It’s important because ethnic minorities aren’t always determined by skin colour but where they come from, in sports there’s an issue if England plays another team then they will be racist against the opposition and if the opposition participate in England there is a difference .

“The context for the reportage is that of the England football team reaching the semi-final of the European Championship, in which they would be playing Germany. On 24 June 1996 the Daily Mirror ran a front page which proved to be a monumental error of judgement on the part of its editor…”

“… Three quarters of the front page of the Mirror showed a photo-montage of the shouting or smiling heads of two English football players, Stuart Pearce and Paul Gascoigne. They were both apparently, wearing the steel helmets worn by British troops in the Second World War. The two main words of the headline read simply: ACHTUNG! SURRDENER. At the bottom of the page was the statement ‘for you fritz, ze Euro 96 Championship is over.’ Most of the paper was then turned into what looked like a wartime issue, drawing heavily upon references to the beginning of the Second World War.”

It’s showing that there is a difference between ethnic minorities and the majority of other athletes, that difference being where they come from. This comes into play only when they pose a threat to England fans, whether it is through a world cup or Olympics. The media does create a big difference, a glass ceiling that they can’t break through in our globalised world.


“Klinsmann is referred to as the ‘former Spurs star’, for though he had become one of the ‘enemy’ Klinsmann was favourite with many of the English football fans”


Further evidence for minorities to be seen as similar if they don’t oppose a threat to England but when they do, they are seen as villains and the British athletes are seen as heroes, and that stereotype hangs over them even after this.

Probert, David and Graham, Andrew (2008): Advance Media Studies. Oxfordshire; Phillipalan retailers

"German national team is routinely represented in the press in terms of its (military) machine-like organisation..."

"...tabloid headlines often use the indexical semiotic signifiers of military stregnth and ruthlessness..."

"...Football is used to connote the historical antagonism between the English and the Germans"


It's a summary of "Representing Race" (useful, but most of what was said in the book was in the previous book but it was summarised far more and didn't mention any actual theorists) and It's about the nation backing their country, in an international game. The media would relate it to war and other international problems e.g. Germany vs England always relate to war, which alienate German footballers in the EPL.

MacKinnan, Kenneth (2003) Representing Men. London; Arnold

"Williams study, published in 1990, found that throughout the media, in reference to sports, women and people from ethnic groups where refered to, by commentators, by their first names. This was opposed to white men who were refered to by either their last name or their full name"

This isn't as important as the other books, but this little quote from the book is a good footnote and very important. Williams (1990) argues that in sport media today, for example during a football game, that women and ethnic minorities are refered to by their first names. For example UFC fighter Kimbo Slice (Black America) is refered to as simply Kimbo. This leads them not to be taken as seriously as other athletes who are refered by their last name.

Task 1


The text I chose for my critical investigation is Gridiron Gang.

The media language used in the scene is connoted through how most of the prisoners are from ethnic decent and how they are the athletes. It connotes a negative representation by the media on ethnic minorities from the majority of athletes as they are the prisoners however on the other hand they connote that sports is an alternative to issues associated with ethnic minorities in society i.e. knife crime.

However the institution decided to go for this representation as it provides an entertainment factor of how ethnic minorities are represented as underdogs in sport, and is a common representation we associate in sports through the media; which is also present through the movie.

The genre is linked to the narrative by following the “typical” narrative of sport movies. Since the 70/80s to now, the same narrative is played in the sport genre, how ethnic minorities are given a second chance and participate in a sporting event, which is the representation that would be carried on when watching actual sports, thanks to the media.

To a certain extent ethnic minorities are represented positively on the basis that they can change. However it is negative as the film is connoting Marxist arguments that the upper-class is using sports to reinforce their ideologies which are represented through the media (Althusser). The media representation is separating them into a different category from the majority of other athletes.

The audiences will consume it, and learn to subordinate ethnic minority groups, but it would be unintentionally, thanks to the representation from the film. The main ideologies from the whole area are that everyone is equal in our post-colonialist and globalised world. So there has to be ethnic minorities portrayed in sports for it to be seen as a norm. But there are colonialist values still present, which is why they are in jail using sports to be normal.

The narrative is that the prisoners are given a “second chance” to become athletes, which is the representation the press have on athletes from ethnic minorities in society today. This narrative has not changed from movies of the same genre. The movie has similar narratives to Longest Yard and Wildcats. It’s almost has become the cliché of sport movies that have ethnic minorities starring in the movies.

The social issues with the scene are that the difference between the ethnic minorities and the majority of athletes is apparent, which ethnic minorities standing out thanks to the issues surrounding them in the media, i.e. knife crime. The ethnic minorities are the people in jail, while the white people are the Christian football team. This has been the typical ideology in Sports Movies portrayed by the media. The ethnic minorities then become fairer and “change the way they behave” thanks to football.

The historical issues are that Colonialism still exists to a certain extent, the fact that they’re second class citizens. Another reason why ethnic minorities are present in sport is down to the fact that we live in a globalised world, and this diversity brings in more cash, this links in with how they are represented as underdogs and that they can change. The political issues are that the upper-class are using sports to reinforce their ideologies.