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Blacks and mass media

Mixing It Up Taking on the Media Bullies and Other Reflections Ishmael Reed Da Capo Press: 306 pp., $15.95 paper

BOOK REVIEW

July 31, 2008|Erin Aubry Kaplan, Special to The Times

Writer AND activist Ishmael Reed's newest book first struck me as a bit unnecessary. "Mixing It Up" is a collection of essays and articles focused on the treatment of race in the American media.

Yet Reed's entire career has been one long media critique. His plays, poetry and especially his satirical, form-breaking novels have countered the racial distortions and omissions of popular (i.e., white) media by constructing a black presence and narrative on their own terms. He long ago established himself as just about the most unapologetically black writer around. Yet time has also brought the realization that the battle for media balance is hardly won.


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"Mixing It Up" is a rant, but mostly an informed one. Reed watches lots of TV and writes lots of letters to the editor, but this book puts all that griping in context through his impressive knowledge of history and literature. From the time of black 19th century novelist Charles Chesnutt until now, the problem is the same: blacks assessed through the clouded lens of white-dominated media, what Reed calls "the white intellectual occupation of the black experience."

Reed warns that the skewed assessments have gotten more sophisticated. He cites examples of good-old-boy racism masquerading as fairness and balance, from targets like Richard J. Herrnstein and Charles Murray's book "The Bell Curve" to the media's discomfiting fascination with black criminality (the O.J. Simpson trial, the Mike Tyson and Kobe Bryant rape cases). Reed, however, doesn't see the crimes of racial distortions as limited to conservatives or liberals, blacks or whites. Among the liberal entities he considers often clueless and dangerous on race are Camille Paglia, Chris Matthews, the New York Times and the Nation.

Despite his status as a man of letters, it's easy to see Reed as a crank. He sometimes tosses out obtuse ideas and leaves good ones underdeveloped; at points he gets too personal and tries to settle old scores. But his core concern of blacks not getting a fair shake in mass media is unimpeachable. Unlike most people in the pundit class, he's a citizen journalist who lives in the 'hood, in this case Oakland. He sees up close the negative effects of reinforcing and glamorizing black images rooted in distressing reality -- incarceration, the drug trade, joblessness, black-on-black homicide.

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