|
You wouldn't think students in a single college class
could
advance the debate on a major media issue. But they have. The issue is
how
the press covers religion. A class in religion at the University of
Rochester
did a detailed study of top newspapers and concluded, based on empirical
evidence, that the media's performance on religion is woeful. The press
plays
up the negative (radical Islam, for example), largely ignores many faith
groups, and fails to tap into the advice of experts. Pollster John Zogby
says
the findings validate what he already knew or suspected about religious
coverage. The findings ring true to me as well.
"When it comes to religion, the press seems at
odds
with itself," the study found. "On one hand, religion pervades
America's newspapers as part of the background on topics from politics
and
economics to sports and the arts. On the other hand, stories about
religion
itself infrequently address religion's beliefs and values."
The study, dubbed "Religion in American
Newspapers:
A Critique and Challenge," was conducted by a senior seminar for
religion majors at the Rochester school. The 29 students were led by
professor William Scott Green and Curt Smith, a former speechwriter for
the
first President Bush, radio commentator, and author of numerous books on
baseball. The papers scrutinized for the month of February were the New
York
Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Dallas
Morning News,
Boston Globe, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Denver Post, Wall Street
Journal,
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, USA Today, and Rochester Democrat &
Chronicle. Thousands of stories were examined.
Though the students didn't say so, I suspect the
findings
apply to coverage of religion, period, not just to newspaper coverage.
It's
not a pretty picture. So what were the specific findings? For one, more
often
than not religion is fleetingly mentioned rather than being the subject
of a
story. Two, religion stories are mostly about how some faith deals with
political or legal issues. Most of the attention paid to Catholics dealt
with
the sex scandal involving priests. Coverage of Protestants, Jews, and
other
religions is more balanced.
The study also found that while religion is often
used to
identify people, it is done haphazardly. Senator Joe Lieberman is
frequently
identified as an orthodox Jew, while other politicians with strong
religious
beliefs are not identified by their faith. No politician is ever
identified
as an atheist, I would add. Coverage of the religious lives of Latinos,
blacks, and women gets little media attention. And as you might expect
after
the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the coverage of Islam is
disproportionate and heavily slanted toward "criminality and bad
deeds."
Another finding: The religious left's opposition to
the
war with Iraq got a lot more attention than the religious case for the
war.
Finally, here is what I think is the most important conclusion: The
bad-news
bias so prevalent in the media today also permeates the coverage of
religion.
"All the papers studied devote more coverage to religion in the
context
of bad deeds than they do to the good deeds religions do in their
communities."
Why is this? The study doesn't say, but I believe
it's
the case because most reporters at large papers--or TV networks or
magazines,
for that matter--are secular in the extreme and regard religion with
disdain.
The recommendations in the study are fairly tame.
The
press should "make a clear distinction between religion and
criminals or
criminal groups associated with that religion," the students say.
It's
hard to argue with that. Coverage should be balanced, the study also
declares. One way is for the media "to help readers achieve an
accurate
perspective on the communities . . . [by reporting on] the ways
religions
actually improve society." And so on.
For those who claim the American press is being
taken
over by the political right, there's nothing in the report to buttress
their
claim. The right in America is often seen as more hospitable to
religion,
particularly Christianity. If that's true, then the media is more
hospitable
to critics of religion and, by extension, opponents of the political
right.
|