OT National Geographic: For Decades, Our Coverage Was Racist.

Discussion in 'Blazers OT Forum' started by SlyPokerDog, Mar 13, 2018.

  1. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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    By , Susan Goldberg Editor in Chief

    It is November 2, 1930, and National Geographic has sent a reporter and a photographer to cover a magnificent occasion: the crowning of Haile Selassie, King of Kings of Ethiopia, Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah. There are trumpets, incense, priests, spear-wielding warriors. The storyruns 14,000 words, with 83 images.

    If a ceremony in 1930 honoring a black man had taken place in America, instead of Ethiopia, you can pretty much guarantee there wouldn’t have been a story at all. Even worse, if Haile Selassie had lived in the United States, he would almost certainly have been denied entry to our lectures in segregated Washington, D.C., and he might not have been allowed to be a National Geographic member. According to Robert M. Poole, who wrote Explorers House: National Geographic and the World It Made, “African Americans were excluded from membership—at least in Washington—through the 1940s.”

    I’m the tenth editor of National Geographic since its founding in 1888. I’m the first woman and the first Jewish person—a member of two groups that also once faced discrimination here. It hurts to share the appalling stories from the magazine’s past. But when we decided to devote our April magazine to the topic of race, we thought we should examine our own history before turning our reportorial gaze to others.

    Race is not a biological construct, as writer Elizabeth Kolbert explains in this issue, but a social one that can have devastating effects. “So many of the horrors of the past few centuries can be traced to the idea that one race is inferior to another,” she writes. “Racial distinctions continue to shape our politics, our neighborhoods, and our sense of self.”

    How we present race matters. I hear from readers that National Geographic provided their first look at the world. Our explorers, scientists, photographers, and writers have taken people to places they’d never even imagined; it’s a tradition that still drives our coverage and of which we’re rightly proud. And it means we have a duty, in every story, to present accurate and authentic depictions—a duty heightened when we cover fraught issues such as race.

    We asked John Edwin Mason to help with this examination. Mason is well positioned for the task: He’s a University of Virginia professor specializing in the history of photography and the history of Africa, a frequent crossroads of our storytelling. He dived into our archives.

    What Mason found in short was that until the 1970s National Geographicall but ignored people of color who lived in the United States, rarely acknowledging them beyond laborers or domestic workers. Meanwhile it pictured “natives” elsewhere as exotics, famously and frequently unclothed, happy hunters, noble savages—every type of cliché.

    Unlike magazines such as Life, Mason said, National Geographic did little to push its readers beyond the stereotypes ingrained in white American culture.

    “Americans got ideas about the world from Tarzan movies and crude racist caricatures,” he said. “Segregation was the way it was. National Geographic wasn’t teaching as much as reinforcing messages they already received and doing so in a magazine that had tremendous authority. National Geographic comes into existence at the height of colonialism, and the world was divided into the colonizers and the colonized. That was a color line, and National Geographic was reflecting that view of the world.”

    Some of what you find in our archives leaves you speechless, like a 1916 story about Australia. Underneath photos of two Aboriginal people, the caption reads: “South Australian Blackfellows: These savages rank lowest in intelligence of all human beings.”

    Questions arise not just from what’s in the magazine, but what isn’t. Mason compared two stories we did about South Africa, one in 1962, the other in 1977. The 1962 story was printed two and a half years after the massacre of 69 black South Africans by police in Sharpeville, many shot in the back as they fled. The brutality of the killings shocked the world.

    National Geographic’s story barely mentions any problems,” Mason said. “There are no voices of black South Africans. That absence is as important as what is in there. The only black people are doing exotic dances … servants or workers. It’s bizarre, actually, to consider what the editors, writers, and photographers had to consciously not see.”

    Contrast that with the piece in 1977, in the wake of the U.S. civil rights era: “It’s not a perfect article, but it acknowledges the oppression,” Mason said. “Black people are pictured. Opposition leaders are pictured. It’s a very different article.”

    Fast-forward to a 2015 story about Haiti, when we gave cameras to young Haitians and asked them to document the reality of their world. “The images by Haitians are really, really important,” Mason said, and would have been “unthinkable” in our past. So would our coverage now of ethnic and religious conflicts, evolving gender norms, the realities of today’s Africa, and much more.

    Mason also uncovered a string of oddities—photos of “the native person fascinated by Western technology. It really creates this us-and-them dichotomy between the civilized and the uncivilized.” And then there’s the excess of pictures of beautiful Pacific-island women.

    “If I were talking to my students about the period until after the 1960s, I would say, ‘Be cautious about what you think you are learning here,’ ” he said. “At the same time, you acknowledge the strengths National Geographic had even in this period, to take people out into the world to see things we’ve never seen before. It’s possible to say that a magazine can open people’s eyes at the same time it closes them.”

    April 4 marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. It’s a worthy moment to step back, to take stock of where we are on race. It’s also a conversation that is changing in real time: In two years, for the first time in U.S. history, less than half the children in the nation will be white. So let’s talk about what’s working when it comes to race, and what isn’t. Let’s examine why we continue to segregate along racial lines and how we can build inclusive communities. Let’s confront today’s shameful use of racism as a political strategy and prove we are better than this.

    For us this issue also provided an important opportunity to look at our own efforts to illuminate the human journey, a core part of our mission for 130 years. I want a future editor of National Geographic to look back at our coverage with pride—not only about the stories we decided to tell and how we told them but about the diverse group of writers, editors, and photographers behind the work.

    We hope you will join us in this exploration of race, beginning this month and continuing throughout the year. Sometimes these stories, like parts of our own history, are not easy to read. But as Michele Norris writes in this issue, “It’s hard for an individual—or a country—to evolve past discomfort if the source of the anxiety is only discussed in hushed tones.”

    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2018/04/from-the-editor-race-racism-history/
     
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  2. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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  3. UncleCliffy'sDaddy

    UncleCliffy'sDaddy We're all Bozos on this bus.

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    I love the cover story. My wife has a cousin in N. Cali who’s married to a black gal. They too have fraternal twins daughters, one of whom is “black” and one of whom is “white”. It’s absolutely mind boggling and cooler than cool. Their mother is high up in school district administration and when racial tensions start to flare she holds school assemblies and trots her daughters out as an example of racial identity being essentially nothing more than a social construct. Those two kids have been an amazing educational package.
     
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  4. riverman

    riverman Writing Team

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    I've always been fascinated with these issues...I think when you have children it's game changing....my oldest children from my first marriage are a testament to the illusion of ethnic clues...their mother is very dark and Guatemalan-Sonoran Hispanic....my oldest son looks just like his mom...second son is blonde, blue eyed like me....daughters the same....my son with my wife now is half Taiwanese....to me he looks like a Brazilian or Eastern European....my grandmother was half French Canadian and half Lakota Sioux...she told me when I was young that I shouldn't trust any ethnic claims from her era because everyone wanted to look American and have an American sounding name...
     
  5. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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    I'm sure all of your children wished they looked like their mothers.
     
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  6. riverman

    riverman Writing Team

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    without a doubt....I'd completely go for that..the boys might not like the idea but hey..I respect their choices!
     
  7. bodyman5000 and 1

    bodyman5000 and 1 Lions, Tigers, Me, Bears

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    Odd. Such differences in posters. You're super humble but @HCP plasters his mug all over this forum. A lot like those jerks sticking ads under windshield wipers in a parking lot.
     
  8. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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  9. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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    [​IMG]
     
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  10. bodyman5000 and 1

    bodyman5000 and 1 Lions, Tigers, Me, Bears

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  11. MARIS61

    MARIS61 Real American

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    Fuck.

    Fake News Mega-Conglomerate Disney just bought The National Geographic, until now America's premiere Photographic, Wildlife and World Culture magazine.

    This really hurts us as a nation.
     
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  12. julius

    julius I wonder if there's beer on the sun Staff Member Global Moderator

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    Do you ever take a night off?
     
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  13. MarAzul

    MarAzul LongShip

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  14. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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    Back in September 2015, 21st Century Fox inked a deal with the National Geographic Society that gave Fox a 73% controlling interest in the magazine in exchange for $725 million, an agreement that turned National Geographic into a for-profit company.

    Two months later, National Geographic laid off 9% (about 180) of its 2,000 employees as it prepared for its new life as a Fox company. It was the largest headcount reduction in the 127-year history of the National Geographic Society.

    National Geographic Society continues to own the remaining 27% of the partnership, called National Geographic Partners. As part of its new deal with Disney, Fox is including its 73% stake in National Geographic Partners.
     
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  15. MARIS61

    MARIS61 Real American

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    Every night.

    Unlike Denny's paid shills, HCP and who knows else, I do this for fun and enlightenment.

    Never know what I'll learn.
     
  16. MarAzul

    MarAzul LongShip

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    Well that makes total sense as to why they have been so wrong for so long, up until now.
     
  17. Lanny

    Lanny Original Season Ticket Holder "Mr. Big Shot"

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    I would suggest concentrating on the post rather than whether a person was wasting his/her time in here.
     

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