Race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the National Basketball Association, 2010-2016

Between 2010 and 2016, two seemingly similar events in the NBA – the free agencies of LeBron James and Kevin Durant – received markedly different reactions from ESPN, the largest sports network in the US. This thesis interrogates the reasons for ESPN’s changing presentations of black athletes over...

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Main Author: King, James
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73513/
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author King, James
author_facet King, James
author_sort King, James
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Between 2010 and 2016, two seemingly similar events in the NBA – the free agencies of LeBron James and Kevin Durant – received markedly different reactions from ESPN, the largest sports network in the US. This thesis interrogates the reasons for ESPN’s changing presentations of black athletes over this period, which resulted in a less overtly racialised treatment of Durant in 2016. Using elements of narrative theory to provide a framework for analysis of both print and social media content, I argue that the joint forces of social media and public discourse on police brutality and race were the primary catalysts for this change in presentation. I argue that there is evidence, revealed by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva’s useful theory of racial contestation, for the endurance of the racialised sentiments present in 2010, and uncover an intricate relationship between ESPN and social media which allowed for the perpetuation of racialised sentiments in 2016 and beyond.
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spelling nottingham-735132023-07-20T04:40:21Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73513/ Race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the National Basketball Association, 2010-2016 King, James Between 2010 and 2016, two seemingly similar events in the NBA – the free agencies of LeBron James and Kevin Durant – received markedly different reactions from ESPN, the largest sports network in the US. This thesis interrogates the reasons for ESPN’s changing presentations of black athletes over this period, which resulted in a less overtly racialised treatment of Durant in 2016. Using elements of narrative theory to provide a framework for analysis of both print and social media content, I argue that the joint forces of social media and public discourse on police brutality and race were the primary catalysts for this change in presentation. I argue that there is evidence, revealed by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva’s useful theory of racial contestation, for the endurance of the racialised sentiments present in 2010, and uncover an intricate relationship between ESPN and social media which allowed for the perpetuation of racialised sentiments in 2016 and beyond. 2023-07-20 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73513/1/approved%20final%20submission%2023_4.pdf King, James (2023) Race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the National Basketball Association, 2010-2016. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. nba National Basketball Association media presentation racialised racialized LeBron James Kevin Durant ESPN
spellingShingle nba
National Basketball Association
media presentation
racialised
racialized
LeBron James
Kevin Durant
ESPN
King, James
Race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the National Basketball Association, 2010-2016
title Race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the National Basketball Association, 2010-2016
title_full Race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the National Basketball Association, 2010-2016
title_fullStr Race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the National Basketball Association, 2010-2016
title_full_unstemmed Race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the National Basketball Association, 2010-2016
title_short Race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the National Basketball Association, 2010-2016
title_sort race and narrative in media presentations of athlete autonomy in the national basketball association, 2010-2016
topic nba
National Basketball Association
media presentation
racialised
racialized
LeBron James
Kevin Durant
ESPN
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73513/