Making Latino News : Race, Language, Class

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1999-09-01
Publisher(s): Sage Pubns
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Summary

This book examines Latino news making as part of a larger narrative - the cultural productions and conceptions of Latinos. The author traces historical and commercial contexts of Latino orientated news production, beginning with late 19th century and early 20th century US Spanish language newspapers, examines the production of contemporary Latino news, and postulates future developments in the field.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsp. vii
Introduction: What Is Latino News?p. 1
Theoretical Contextsp. 5
History and Contextp. 11
U.S. Spanish Language Newspapers: 1848-1970p. 13
Late 19th-Century Newspapersp. 15
Early 20th-Century Newspapersp. 16
La Prensa of San Antonio (1913-1957)p. 17
Ignacio Lopez and El Espectador (1933-1961)p. 19
La Opinionp. 21
History of the Hispanic Audiencep. 26
Early U.S. Spanish Language Radio: 1920s, 1930s, 1940sp. 28
The Early Transnational Hispanic Audiencep. 31
Changing the Immigrant Paradigmp. 34
Early U.S. Spanish Language Televisionp. 35
From Regional to National: Hispanic Marketingp. 38
The "Discovery" of the Hispanic Market (Again)p. 41
Commercial Ethnicity: The Production and Marketing of the Hispanic Audiencep. 46
Marketing and Ethnicityp. 48
U.S. Hispanic Panethnicity and Racial Formationp. 49
Quantifying Ethnicity: The Contemporary Hispanic Audiencep. 50
The Nielsen Ratings and Hispanic Audience Productionp. 51
National Hispanic Television Indexp. 55
Other Spanish Language Mediap. 58
Univision and Telemundo: The Hispanic Market Institutionalizedp. 61
Just Another Audience: "Born-Again Hispanic" Programmingp. 66
The Production of Contemporary Latino Newsp. 73
Nationhood, Nationalism, and Ethnicity in the Making of U.S. Latino Newsp. 75
Latino Journalistic Panethnicityp. 77
Latino Objectivityp. 84
Latino Newsp. 95
Latin America Newsp. 99
Local Latino News: Los Angeles and Miamip. 107
Los Angelesp. 109
Miamip. 119
Bilingual and English Language Mediap. 131
Bilingual Hispanic Mediap. 134
Bilingual Latino Journalismp. 135
English Language Latino Journalismp. 139
The Future of Latino Media: Suggestions for Further Researchp. 145
Referencesp. 147
Indexp. 159
About the Authorp. 168
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved.

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