This page was created by Paul Merchant, Jr.. 

Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 2: Accessible Civil Rights Heritage

Perlman Abstract

Across the 1960s, National Educational Television’s (NET) public affairs programs tackled the issue of US racial discrimination. As this essay illuminates, these episodes constitute an alternate audiovisual archive for the fight for racial justice. While diverse topically, politically, and aesthetically, NET programs often shared a commitment to deliberation, debate, and discussion as crucial to defining and redressing the problem of US racism. This essay illuminates, however, how a range of NET programs explicitly or implicitly questioned the power of conversation to ameliorate racial tensions and challenged the role and power of the media, inclusive of NET, in structuring the parameters of how racism was defined and ought to be redressed.

This page is referenced by: