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Foreword /Jane Rhodes
News of Baltimore: journalism and public expression about a city's problems /? Linda Steiner and Silvio Waisbord
News and the politics of place. Renewing the lease: how news characterizations of Baltimore realigned white reign of US cities /? Robert Gutsche and Carolina Estrada
Local news framing of Baltimore as a segregated market /? Andrew Rojecki
The sociological eye in the news: covering West Baltimore in the aftermath of the death of Freddie Gray /? Silvio Waisbord
Order in Baltimore? on place-frames in US journalism /? Barbie Zelizer
Voices, visibility and the public sphere. It's not a pretty picture: visualizing the Baltimore crisis on social media /? Stuart Allan and Lina Dencik
Black agency in the production of counter-narratives of police brutality /? Ashley Howard
The black press and Baltimore: the continuing importance of African American journalism during urban uprisings /? Sarah Jackson
Who killed Freddie Gray?: the video that started it all /? Khadijah Costley White
Journalistic discourse and criticism. Historical discontinuities in news coverage of the Baltimore 2015 riots and the 1965 Watts riots /? Bonnie Brennen
Journalists as victims and perpetrators of violence /? Matt Carlson
Who speaks for the "real" Baltimore?: how journalists understood their authority and ability to represent "place" during the 2015 unrest /? Katy June-Friesen
"I don't want him to be a Freddie Gray": the hero mom on trial /? Linda Steiner and Carolyn Bronstein
Conclusion
Why Baltimore matters: lessons for journalism studies /? Silvio Waisbord and Linda Steiner

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This book examines how the media approached long-standing and long-simmering issues of race, class, violence, and social responsibility in Baltimore during the demonstrations, violence, and public debate in the spring of 2015. Contributors take Baltimore to be an important place, symbol, and marker, though the issues are certainly not unique to Baltimore: they have crucial implications for contemporary journalism in the U.S. These events prompt several questions: How well did journalism do, in Baltimore, nearby and nationally, in explaining the endemic issues besetting Baltimore? What might have been done differently? What is the responsibility of journalists to anticipate and cover these problems? How should they cover social problems in urban areas? What do the answers to such questions suggest about how journalists should in future cover such problems?



This book examines how the media approached long-standing and long-simmering issues of race, class, violence, and social responsibility in Baltimore during the demonstrations, violence, and public debate in the spring of 2015.