Educating the American Popular: suburban resentment and the representation of the inner city in contemporary film and television
Author:
Cameron McCarthy a
| Affiliation: | a Department of Curriculum & Instruction, University of Illinois at Urbana, Champaign, Illinois 61820, USA |
DOI:
10.1080/1361332980010103
Publication Frequency:
4 issues per year
Subjects:
Multicultural Education;
Sociology of Education;
Formats available:
PDF
(English)
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Abstract
Drawing on the theories of identity formation in the writings of C. L. R. James (1978, 1993) and Friedrich Nietzsche (1967), Cameron McCarthy argues that contemporary film and television play a critical role in the production, coordination and channelling of suburban resentment and retributive morality onto their central target: the depressed inner city. McCarthy also looks at the discursive impact of resentment on the sense of capacity and agency among black school youth at a comprehensive high school (“Liberty High”) in Los Angeles. For this segment of the essay, he draws on ethnographic data collected at this Los Angeles high school some 6 months before the videotaped images of LAPD's police beating of Rodney King reverberated around the world. These developments deeply inform race relations in late-century American society. McCarthy ultimately contends that these race relations are conducted in the field of simulation as before a putative public court of appeal (Baudrillard, 1983).
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