Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2010
The way we see things is affected by what we know or believe. In the Middle Ages when men believed in the physical existence of Hell the sight of fire must have meant something different from what it means today. Nevertheless their ideas of Hell owed a lot to the sight of fire consuming and the ashes remaining – as well as to their experience of the pain of burns.
(Berger, 1973, p. 8)In chapters 4, 5 and 6, I explored in some detail how study groups found meaning in the KTTV text – their “ways of seeing.” These groups, you will recall, were categorized by race-as-representation in order to facilitate an analysis of raced differences in this meaning-making process. But how valid were these a priori raced groupings? That is, with what degree of confidence can one attribute differences in decoding to differences in raced identification rather than some other variable or variables? After all, I did observe decoding differences within the raced groupings. Were these within-“race” differences sufficiently overshadowed by the between-“race” differences so that one might meaningfully speak of raced differences?
To proceed as if “race”-per-se explains differences in the television experience essentializes “race” and explains nothing. The real question, the one left unanswered by this type of approach, is as follows: What is it about race-as-representation in the US context that results in the decoding differences we encounter? To put it another way, how does raced subjectivity influence the television decoding process, and how does this process, in turn, influence the construction and reproduction of raced subjectivities?
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