1,061
Views
19
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Another Disaster: An examination of portrayals of race in Hurricane Katrina coverage

Pages 75-89 | Published online: 05 Dec 2007

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (13)

Mohammed el-Nawawy & Mohamad Hamas Elmasry. (2023) White Supremacy on CNN and Fox: AC 360 and Hannity Coverage of the Charlottesville ‘Unite the Right’ Rally. Journalism Practice 17:5, pages 948-969.
Read now
Ever Josue Figueroa. (2022) Casting heroes and victims of disaster events: representations of race and gender in Hurricane Harvey front page news images. Critical Studies in Media Communication 39:5, pages 455-471.
Read now
Lucile Henderson, Rebecca (Riva) Tukachinsky Forster, Leora Kalili & Simone Guillory. (2022) Visual Framing Effects of News Coverage of Police Use of Deadly Force on Intergroup Relationships. Howard Journal of Communications 33:1, pages 24-44.
Read now
Allison Kwesell & Chelsea A. LeNoble. (2021) Socio-psychological Recovery in Post-nuclear Fukushima, Japan: Affective Reactions to Media Portrayal in Photographs. Visual Communication Quarterly 28:2, pages 71-87.
Read now
Nicole Smith Dahmen, Andrea Miller & David L. Morris. (2018) The Depth of Hurricane Katrina Imagery: A Longitudinal Study Through the Lens of Commemorative Journalism and Iconicity. Communication Reports 31:3, pages 131-142.
Read now
Mohammed el-Nawawy & Mohamad Hamas Elmasry. (2018) Is America “Post-Racist”?. Journalism Studies 19:7, pages 942-959.
Read now
Nicole Smith Dahmen & Daniel D. Morrison. (2016) Place, Space, Time. Digital Journalism 4:5, pages 658-678.
Read now
Hemant Shah & Mai Yamagami. (2015) Color-Blind Racism in Television News and Commentary: The Redemption of Shirley Sherrod. Howard Journal of Communications 26:2, pages 193-205.
Read now
Nicole Smith Dahmen & Andrea Miller. (2012) Redefining Iconicity: A Five-Year Study of Visual Themes of Hurricane Katrina. Visual Communication Quarterly 19:1, pages 4-19.
Read now
KirkA. Johnson, MarkK. Dolan & John Sonnett. (2011) Speaking of Looting: An Analysis of Racial Propaganda in National Television Coverage of Hurricane Katrina. Howard Journal of Communications 22:3, pages 302-318.
Read now
NadeneN. Vevea, RobertS. Littlefield, Julie Fudge & AndreaJ. Weber. (2011) Portrayals of Dominance: Local Newspaper Coverage of a Natural Disaster. Visual Communication Quarterly 18:2, pages 84-99.
Read now
Murali Balaji. (2011) Racializing Pity: The Haiti Earthquake and the Plight of “Others”. Critical Studies in Media Communication 28:1, pages 50-67.
Read now

Articles from other publishers (6)

M B Fallin Hunzaker & Marcus Mann. (2021) Sharing Stories, Sharing Bias: How Descriptions of Context Shape Negative Stereotype Use in Response to Accounts of Economic Adversity. Social Problems 68:3, pages 696-719.
Crossref
Tara Marie Mortensen, Leigh Moscowitz, Anan Wan & Aimei Yang. (2019) The marijuana user in US news media: an examination of visual stereotypes of race, culture, criminality and normification. Visual Communication 19:2, pages 231-255.
Crossref
Jacqui Ewart & Hamish McLean. (2018) Best practice approaches for reporting disasters. Journalism 20:12, pages 1573-1592.
Crossref
Marta Neüff. 2018. Words of Crisis as Words of Power. Words of Crisis as Words of Power.
John Sonnett, Kirk A. Johnson & Mark K. Dolan. (2015) Priming Implicit Racism in Television News: Visual and Verbal Limitations on Diversity. Sociological Forum 30:2, pages 328-347.
Crossref
Jennifer Petersen. (2014) Risk and the Politics of Disaster Coverage in Haiti and Katrina. Communication, Culture & Critique 7:1, pages 37-54.
Crossref

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.