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CTE, Media, and the NFL: Framing a Public Health Crisis as a Football Epidemic
By (Author) Travis R. Bell
By (author) Janelle Applequist
By (author) Christian Dotson-Pierson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
25th June 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
American football
617.10276332
Winner of Communication and Sport Division's Outstanding Book Award 2020
Hardback
182
Width 159mm, Height 238mm, Spine 18mm
463g
CTE, Media, and the NFL: Framing a Public Health Crisis as a Football Epidemic examines the central role of media in constructing an entangled relationship between chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and the National Football League (NFL), challenging a predominately symbiotic sports/media complex. The authors of this book analyze more than a decade of media coverage, along with three prominent films, to unpack how media discourse resurrects CTE, a preventable degenerative brain disease linked to boxing in 1928, and subsequently frames it as a football epidemic dating back to 2005. The authors position CTE as a public health crisis, whereby media coverage of CTE and the NFLs vigorous reliance on controversial published research by the Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (MTBI) Committee parallels the moral panic of the HIV/AIDS epidemic and Big Tobaccos manufacturing of doubt through faulty science. This book argues that the continued aspiration and idolization of the NFL, and its lack of accountability for health concerns surrounding brain injuries, highlight the firm grasp of hegemonic masculinity on the ideology of American football - further problematizing medias glorification of the sport. Scholars of sports media, health communication, and general media studies will find this book particularly useful to discuss longitudinal effects of media framing centered on critical health risks in sport and the challenge of translating accurate scientific knowledge to the public domain.
Travis R. Bell, Janelle Applequist, and Christian Dotson-Pierson offer a compelling narrative of unstoppable force (Americas love of football) meeting the immovable object (accumulating evidence of the sport as a major health epidemic). This is a book of searing insight and importshowing the role media plays both in telling the uncomfortable stories and also in stifling them to keep the NFL party rolling. -- Andrew C. Billings, The University of Alabama
Travis R. Bell is assistant professor of digital and sports media in the Zimmerman School of Advertising & Mass Communications at the University of South Florida. Janelle Applequist is assistant professor of advertising in the Zimmerman School of Advertising & Mass Communications at the University of South Florida. Christian Dotson-Pierson is speech instructor at the University of South Carolina.