Fr. 130.00

Media & Mental Health - Using Mass Media to Reduce the Stigma of Mental Illness

English · Hardback

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Description

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The mass media are an important source of information about mental health, yet television shows, news stories, social media posts, and other media fare often perpetuate stereotypes and misunderstandings about mental illness. For 70 years, scholars in media studies, psychology, sociology, and other fields have investigated media representations of mental illness and how exposure to media content informs people's beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors related to mental health. Despite the attention, little progress has been made in changing these messages and mitigating negative outcomes.

Enter Media & Mental Health. This book flips the issue on its head, examining the question: Can the problem be a solution? Informed by budding lines of research from media studies, psychology, and other fields, this book discusses ways in which television, music, movies, news, social media, and other mass media fare may challenge the stigmatization of mental illness. It contains insight that is valuable for both academic and lay audiences, including "best practices" for mental health professionals, activists, and organizations to help reduce stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination and to improve public understanding of this oft-misunderstood part of the human experience.

List of contents

Introduction. The Problem Can Be a Solution - When We Talk about Stigma - A History of Violence: Mental Illness in the Media - "Us" and "Them": Media & Stigma - Where It Starts: Understanding the Creation of Media Content - Shaping the Agenda: Making Mental Health a "Top Issue" - The Power of Celebrity: How Our Identification with Media Characters and Personalities Can Combat Stigma - Meet John: Using Mediated Contact to Challenge Stereotypes - People Like Me: How Social Media Can Connect Us with Communities - Protest: Calling for Change Via News and Social Media - Educating the Masses: The Potential of Media and Mental Health Literacy - Walk in My Digital Shoes: Using Games & VR to Nurture Empathy - The Song (No Longer) Remains the Same: Mental Health Messages in Music - What Can We Do? Conclusions and Action Items - Index.

About the author










Scott Parrott is an associate professor in the Department of Journalism and Creative Media at the University of Alabama. His research examines media stereotypes, focusing on the stigmatization of mental illness.

Summary

This book flips the issue on its head, examining the question: Can the problem be a solution? Informed by budding lines of research from media studies, psychology, and other fields, this book discusses ways in which television, music, movies, news, social media and other mass media fare may challenge the stigmatization of mental illness.

Product details

Authors Scott Parrott
Assisted by Gary L. Kreps (Editor), Gary L Kreps (Editor)
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 23.03.2023
 
EAN 9781433188084
ISBN 978-1-4331-8808-4
No. of pages 168
Dimensions 150 mm x 13 mm x 225 mm
Weight 355 g
Series Health Communication
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Media, communication

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