From Reel to Real: Hollywood Representations of Black Presidents and Reactions to the Obama Presidency
Race in the Age of Obama: Part 2
ISBN: 978-1-78350-982-9, eISBN: 978-1-78350-981-2
Publication date: 26 May 2015
Abstract
Purpose
This study compares filmic and televisual representations of fictional black presidents to white Americans’ reactions to the advent of the United States’s first African American president. My main goal is to determine if there is convergence between these mediated representations and whites’ real-world representations of Barack Obama. I then weigh the evidence for media pundits’ speculations that Obama owes his election to positive portrayals of these fictional heads of state.
Methodology/approach
The film and television analyses examine each black president’s social network, personality, character traits, preparation for office, and leadership ability. I then compare the ideological messages conveyed through these portrayals to the messages implicated in white Americans’ discursive and pictorial representations of Barack Obama.
Findings
Both filmic and televisual narratives and public discourses and images construct and portray black presidents with stereotypical character traits and abilities. These representations are overwhelmingly negative and provide no support for the argument that there is a cause–effect relationship between filmic and televisual black presidents and Obama’s election victory.
Research implications
Neither reel nor real-life black presidents can elude the representational quagmire that distorts African Americans’ abilities and diversity. Discourses, iconography, narratives, and other representations that define black presidents through negative tropes imply that blacks are incapable of effective leadership. These hegemonic representations seek to delegitimize black presidents and symbolically return them to subordinate statuses.
Keywords
Citation
Newsome, Y.D. (2015), "From Reel to Real: Hollywood Representations of Black Presidents and Reactions to the Obama Presidency", Race in the Age of Obama: Part 2 (Research in Race and Ethnic Relations, Vol. 19), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 233-267. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0195-744920140000019011
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2015 Emerald Group Publishing Limited