Racializing Objectivity
How the White Southern Press Used Journalism Standards to Defend Jim Crow
When the civil rights movement began to challenge Jim Crow laws, the white southern press reframed the coverage of racism and segregation as a debate over journalism standards. Many white southern editors, for instance, designated Black Americans as “Negro” in news stories, claiming it was necessary for accuracy and “objectivity,” even as white subjects went unlabeled. These news professionals disparaged media outlets that did not adhere to these norms, such as the Black press. In this way, the southern white press weaponized journalism standards—and particularly the idea of objectivity—to counter and discredit reporting that challenged white supremacy.
Through deep engagement with letters and other materials in numerous archives from editors, journalists, and leaders of newswire services, Racializing Objectivity interrogates and exposes how the white southern press used journalism standards as a professional rationalization for white supremacy and a political strategy to resist desegregation. Gwyneth Mellinger argues that white skin privilege gave these news professionals a stake in the racial status quo and was thus a conflict of interest as they defended Jim Crow. Her study includes an examination of the Southern Education Reporting Service, an objectivity project whose impartiality, she contends, instead affirmed systemic racism. In a pointed counternarrative, Mellinger highlights Black editors and academics who long criticized the supposed objectivity of the press and were consequently marginalized and often dismissed as illegitimate, fanciful, and even paranoid.
Elegant and incisive, Racializing Objectivity unequivocally demonstrates that a full telling of twentieth-century press history must reckon with the white southern press’ cooptation of objectivity and other professional standards to skew racial narratives about Black Americans, as well as northern whites and democracy itself.
‘So much has been written about journalistic objectivity and its history that it’s hard to make a significant original contribution, yet Mellinger sheds new light onto how it influenced the press and the larger issue of Jim Crow segregation. With tremendous skill and effectiveness, her arguments are clear, thoroughly convincing, and backed up by incontrovertible evidence.’—Matthew Pressman, On Press: The Liberal Values That Shaped the News
‘Many studies, including numerous award-winning books on the Black press, have commonly cited and indicted the patently racist pages of the white press. But rarely has it been documented in so robustly and intimately a fashion as Racializing Objectivity does to reveal such a fresh and insightful take on media history, succeeding far more than previous studies in uncovering unseen sides of the white press and its crucial role as a race-making institution.’—D’Weston Haywood, author of Let Us Make Men: The Twentieth-Century Black Press and a Manly Vision for Racial Advancement