Sut Jhally: Difference between revisions
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== Works == |
== Works == |
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Jhally is often highly critical of [[Popular culture studies|popular culture]], [[Criticism of advertising|advertising]], as well as various aspects of [[foreign policy of the United States|US foreign policy]]. |
Jhally is often highly critical of [[Popular culture studies|popular culture]], [[Criticism of advertising|advertising]], as well as various aspects of [[foreign policy of the United States|US foreign policy]]. |
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In his 1991 video ''Dreamworlds'', he describes the image of women in music videos as male adolescent fantasies: young and pretty, willing and eager to please men, saying no when meaning yes, often reduced to outward appearances and body parts. He concludes that an unhealthy attitude towards [[sexual violence]] can be fostered by these videos, and calls for balancing them with other cultural representations of sexuality. When MTV complained about his use of parts of [[copyright]]ed music videos, he claimed [[fair use]] and contacted the media about the story.<ref>[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEFD81631F93BA25756C0A967958260 "A Professor's Class Video Runs Into an MTV Protest"], ''[[The New York Times]]'', 18 May 1991.</ref> |
In his 1991 video ''Dreamworlds'', he describes the image of women in music videos as male adolescent fantasies: young and pretty, willing and eager to please men, saying no when meaning yes, often reduced to outward appearances and body parts. He concludes that an unhealthy attitude towards [[sexual violence]] can be fostered by these videos, and calls for balancing them with other cultural representations of sexuality. When MTV complained about his use of parts of [[copyright]]ed music videos, he claimed [[fair use]] and contacted the media about the story.<ref>[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEFD81631F93BA25756C0A967958260 "A Professor's Class Video Runs Into an MTV Protest"], ''[[The New York Times]]'', 18 May 1991.</ref> |
Latest revision as of 12:24, 23 December 2024
Sut Jhally | |
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Born | 1955 (age 68–69) Kenya |
Education | University of York; University of Victoria; Simon Fraser University |
Occupation | Professor of communication |
Employer | University of Massachusetts Amherst |
Known for | Founder of the Media Education Foundation |
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Sut Jhally (born 1955) is a professor of communication at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, whose work focuses on cultural studies, advertising, media, and consumption.[1] He is the producer of more than 40 documentaries on media literacy topics and the founder and executive director of the Media Education Foundation.[2]
Established in 1992, the Media Education Foundation (MEF) is a non-profit that "produces and distributes documentary films and other educational resources to inspire critical reflection on the social, political, and cultural impact of American mass media". Their aim is to inspire students to think critically and in new ways about the hyper-mediated world around them.[3]
Also the author of six books and numerous scholarly and popular articles, Jhally is a public speaker and teacher. He has won the "Distinguished Teacher Award" at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where the student newspaper has also voted him "Best Professor".[4] He has shown his films and lectured at many colleges and universities nationally and internationally. He was named one of New Woman magazine's "People of the Year" in 1992.[2] Jhally taught both undergraduate and graduate level courses which focused on media, public relations and propaganda, as well as gender, sex and representation.
Jhally, in a speech from 2010 on the threat of advertising, states that "advertising is the most powerful and sustained system of propaganda in human history and its cumulative cultural and political effects unless very quickly checked will be responsible for destroying the world as we know it. In the process of achieving this the masters of the advertising system, global corporations bent on nothing but private profits, will be responsible for the deaths of millions of people, mostly non-Western. In addition the peoples of the world will be prevented from achieving true happiness. Simply stated our survival as a species is dependent upon minimizing the threat from advertising and the commercial culture that has spawned it."[5]
Jhally was born in Kenya, and raised in England. On completing his undergraduate work at the University of York in England, he moved to Canada after accepting a scholarship to the University of Victoria. He continued his studies at Simon Fraser University, where he received his PhD.[6]
Works
[edit]Jhally is often highly critical of popular culture, advertising, as well as various aspects of US foreign policy.
In his 1991 video Dreamworlds, he describes the image of women in music videos as male adolescent fantasies: young and pretty, willing and eager to please men, saying no when meaning yes, often reduced to outward appearances and body parts. He concludes that an unhealthy attitude towards sexual violence can be fostered by these videos, and calls for balancing them with other cultural representations of sexuality. When MTV complained about his use of parts of copyrighted music videos, he claimed fair use and contacted the media about the story.[7]
In the 2004 video Peace, Propaganda & the Promised Land, he attempts to establish the influence of Israeli propaganda and PR on the United States public opinion regarding the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
In the 2004 video Hijacking Catastrophe, he argues that the "War on Terror" has been used by U.S. officials as a pretext to project military power across the world.[8]
In his 2006 video Reel Bad Arabs, he explores the vilification of Arabs in American cinema, following Jack Shaheen's 2001 book Reel Bad Arabs.
Criticism
[edit]Laurie Meeker of Evergreen State College criticized Sut's Dreamworlds for "failing to draw attention to his own manipulations of the medium" of rock video.[9]
Video documentaries
[edit]- Pack of Lies – the Advertising of Tobacco (with Jean Kilbourne) (1992)
- The Killing Screens (with George Gerbner) (1994)
- The Date Rape Backlash (1994)
- Slim Hopes (with Jean Kilbourne) (1995)
- Dreamworlds II: Desire, Sex, Power in Music Video (1997)
- Advertising and the End of the World (1998)
- Off the Straight and Narrow (with Katherine Sender) (1998)
- Tough Guise: Men, Violence and the Crisis in Masculinity (with Jackson Katz) (1999)
- Killing Us Softly 3 (with Jean Kilbourne) (1999)
- Wrestling with Manhood: Boys, Bullying & Battering (with Jackson Katz) (2002)
- No Logo (2003), based on Naomi Klein's book No Logo
- Playing UnFair, The Media Image of the Female Athlete (2003)
- Hijacking Catastrophe: 9/11, Fear & the Selling of American Empire (with Jeremy Earp), (2004)
- Peace, Propaganda & the Promised Land (with Bathsheba Ratzkoff), (2004)
- Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People (2006), based on Jack Shaheen's 2001 book Reel Bad Arabs
- Dreamworlds 3: Desire, Sex & Power in Music Video (2007)
- The Codes of Gender (2010)
- The Occupation of the American Mind: Israel's Public Relations War in the United States (2016)
- Advertising at the Edge of the Apocalypse (2017)
- Atrocity Inc: How Israel Sells its Destruction of Gaza (with Max Blumenthal) (2024)[10]
Books
[edit]- Cultural Politics in Contemporary America, edited by Ian H. Angus and Sut Jhally (Routledge, 1988), ISBN 0-415-90010-7
- Enlightened Racism (with Justin Lewis), (1992), ISBN 0-8133-1419-4. Argues that The Cosby Show reinforced the myth that Blacks who don't "make it" have only themselves to blame.
- The Codes of Advertising (1999), ISBN 0-415-90353-X
- Social Communication in Advertising (with William Leiss, Stephen Kline, and Jacqueline Botterill), (2004), ISBN 0-415-96676-0
- The Spectacle of Accumulation: essays in culture, media, & politics, (2006), ISBN 0-8204-7904-7
Articles
[edit]- "Advertising at the Edge of the Apocalypse", in: Robin Andersen and Lance Strate (eds), Critical studies in media commercialism, New York, 2000
References
[edit]- ^ "Media Education Foundation - educational documentary films". Archived from the original on October 19, 2002.
- ^ a b Sut Jhally lecture topics, Professor Sut Jhally, PhD.
- ^ "About MEF", Media Education Foundation.
- ^ Professor and Chair of Communication Sut Jhally Retires, University of Massachusetts Amherst.
- ^ "Advertising & the Perfect Storm - Sut Jhally". YouTube.
- ^ Richer, Shawna, "Shop Till You ... Stop!", Common Dreams. Archived November 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "A Professor's Class Video Runs Into an MTV Protest", The New York Times, 18 May 1991.
- ^ Anita Gates, "A Plan to Create a New World Order", The New York Times, 10 September 2004.
- ^ Meeker, Laurie (March 1, 1993). "Whose Fantasy?: Sut Jhally's Dreamworld". Visual Anthropology Review. 9 (1): 123–130. doi:10.1525/var.1993.9.1.123.
- ^ Nick Holdsworth: How Israel sells its destruction of Gaza, Modern Times Review, 14 October 2024
External links
[edit]- Official website
- Sut Jhally's page at U. Mass. Amherst
- NYT Filmography
- Sut Jhally at IMDb
- Sut Jhally v. James Twitchell: What's wrong with advertising? (a debate), Stay Free magazine #16, Summer 1999
- 1955 births
- Alumni of the University of York
- American businesspeople
- American male writers of Indian descent
- American people of Indian descent
- American socialists
- British emigrants to the United States
- English people of Indian descent
- Kenyan people of Indian descent
- Living people
- Massachusetts socialists
- Simon Fraser University alumni
- University of Massachusetts Amherst faculty