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Covering the Body: The Kennedy Assassination, the Media, and the Shaping of Collective Memory
 
 
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Covering the Body: The Kennedy Assassination, the Media, and the Shaping of Collective Memory [Hardcover]

Barbie Zelizer (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

October 15, 1992 0226979709 978-0226979700 1
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.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A useful scholarly book on the media's efforts to promote themselves as authorities in our collective memory of JFK's assassination.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

From Library Journal

A former reporter for the Reuters News Agency and an assistant professor of rhetoric and communications, Zelizer asks why the news media, trained to present information in narrative form, spend so much time defending their coverage of the assassination of President Kennedy. She suggests that since no journalist in Dallas at the time actually saw the shooting, each one instead strives for acceptance as an authority in the creation of a national collective memory, which is more emotional than the journalistic story. She details this legitimizing process in an interesting and useful scholarly book that is more for media experts than Kennedy assassination groupies.
- Abraham Z. Bass, Northern Illinois Univ., DeKalb
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 307 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press; 1 edition (October 15, 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226979709
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226979700
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,902,062 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't be Put Off by Overuse of the Word "Discourse", November 24, 2007
There is some very significant baby in this academese- obscurantist bathwater.

Basically this is an instiutional approach to explaining why the media got it wrong. Does the author put it like this? Not exactly. The woman needs a job!

She argues that the Kennedy Assasination took place at a key time for TV news; in 1963 the networks had just switched form a 15 minute to a half-hour broadcast. The assassination, she argues, made TV news. The later you get the more reporters and editors interjected what they were doing at the time; thier identities and the legitimacy of TV journalism itself had become married to a single bullet, even though it was much more of a shotgun wedding.

Some of the narrative desriptions of individual reporters are priceless. Zelizer does a masterful job of capturing the chaos of the telphone truck, where there was only one phone. Sometimes these narratives of direct reporter experience seem to yearn for conclusions beyone those modest ones that the professor presents.

Don't be put off by the cumbersome style of this book. It is worth reading twice. It goes far toward explaining why the Corporate Media have worked so dilligently to cast Warren Commission Sceptics in such a condescending light. Just so, those aristocratic flat-earthers!

This book is simply too dangerous to be written clearly.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Common sense is quite wrong in thinking that the past is fixed, immutable, invariable, as against the ever-changing flux of the present. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
must trust his instinct, assassination tales, authoritative interpretive community, appropriate journalistic practice, assassination coverage, other retellers, assassination story, assassination weekend, institutional tales, assassination narratives, journalistic celebrity, rhetorical legitimation, journalistic authority, professional lore, historical recordkeeping, assassination memories, assassination accounts, authoritative spokespersons, eyewitness status, journalistic professionalism, media retrospectives, independent critics, journalistic community, assassination record, assassination files
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York Times, Warren Commission, Tom Wicker, Dan Rather, White House, President Kennedy, Walter Cronkite, Parkland Hospital, Lee Harvey Oswald, Associated Press, Jacqueline Kennedy, William Manchester, Theodore White, Air Force One, Hugh Sidey, Charles Roberts, Columbia Journalism Review, Warren Report, Washington Post, David Halberstam, Jack Anderson, James Reston, Secret Service, Tom Pettit, Benjamin Bradlee
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