Document details

Blind Spot: When Journalists Don't Get Religion

Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press (2009), xv, 220 pp.

Contains index

ISBN 978-0-195374377

Signature commbox: 10-Religion-E 2009

"This book analyzes media coverage of major news stories in which religion is a major component and recounts how journalist often miss, or misunderstand, these stories because they do not take religion seriously, or misunderstand religion when they do take it seriously. Since religion is a major and growing factor in human affairs throughout the world and, hence in major news stories, including those stories often mislabeled “secular,” if reporters do not take it seriously or understand it, then they will be poorer reporters. To the extent that journalists do not grasp events’ religious dimensions, both global and local, they are hindered from, and sometimes incapable of, describing what is happening in the world around us. The book contains six case studies that each describe an important event, issue, trend, problem, or situation, seek to show the centrality of religion to the story, then outline how journalists actually covered it, and how they often got it wrong. The two concluding chapters focus on ways, both conceptual and practical, of improving coverage." (Publisher description)
PART I: BACKGROUND
Introduction / Paul Marshall, 3
1 God is winning: religion in global politics / Timothy Samuel Shah and Monica Duffy Toft, 11
PART II: CASE STUDIES
2 Religion and terrorism: misreading Bin Laden / Paul Marshall, 31
3 Decades of misreporting Iran and Iraq / Michael Rubin, 47
4 Religion and international human rights / Allen D. Hertzke, 65
5 "Misunderestimating" religion in the 2004 presidential campaign / C. Danielle Vinson and James L. Guth, 87
6 The media and the popes / Amy Welborn, 107
7 Mel Gibson's Christ: the passion of the press / Jeremy Lott, 129
PART III: GETTING IT RIGHT
8 Getting religion in the newsroom / Terry Mattingly, 145
9 Principles for getting it right / Roberta Green Ahmanson, 159