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UHV professor�s research on media featured in three new books

Wednesday, February 14, 2018 | By
<p>A University of Houston-Victoria professor&#39;s research on power, race, religion, politics and the media, and their impacts on society have been featured in three recently released books.</p> <p>Mark Ward Sr., a UHV associate professor of communication, joined 13 other scholars from the across the country to publish &ldquo;Leadership Through the Lens: Interrogating Production, Presentation, and Power,&rdquo; edited by Creshema Murray of the University of Houston-Downtown and released by Lexington Books. The collection of essays explores ways in which diverse leadership styles are illustrated in a variety of contexts on television.</p> <div class="mugshot left"> <div class="shot"><a href="images/uploads/20180214/Ward-Mark-larger.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Mark Ward" src="images/uploads/20180214/Ward-Mark-100w.jpg" /> </a></div> <div class="name">Mark Ward</div> </div> <p>&ldquo;The current political climate has highlighted how styles of leadership make a difference in our institutions,&rdquo; Ward said. &ldquo;Television not only reflects what we think about leadership and power, but also shapes what we think. The examples covered in the book range from &lsquo;Saturday Night Live&rsquo; parodies of the 2016 presidential debates, to dramas like &lsquo;The Americans&rsquo; and reality shows like &lsquo;Total Divas.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p> <div class="mugshot right"> <div class="shot"><a href="images/uploads/20180214/Leadership-Lens-larger.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Bookcover Leadership through the Lens" src="images/uploads/20180214/Leadership-Lens-100w.jpg" /> </a></div> </div> <p>Ward&rsquo;s own essay is titled &ldquo;Television Transcendent: How the Electronic Church Constructs Charismatic Leadership as a Norm of American Religious Life.&rdquo; The essay shows how televangelists and radio preachers model leadership based on personal charisma, and how this leadership style has become the norm in local churches.</p> <p>&ldquo;Three-quarters of U.S. adults affiliate with an organized religion, and one-quarter affiliate with evangelical churches,&rdquo; Ward said. &ldquo;Whether it&#39;s in the White House or in the local pulpit, leaders who base their power on personal charisma can be effective but must also be held accountable by their followers.&rdquo;</p> <div class="mugshot left"> <div class="shot"><a href="images/uploads/20180214/Contemporary-Culture-larger.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Bookcover Leadership through the Lens" src="images/uploads/20180214/Contemporary-Culture-100w.jpg" /> </a></div> </div> <p>Issues of religion and race in the media were addressed in another essay by Ward titled &ldquo;Segregating the Dial: Institutional Racism in Evangelical Radio&rdquo; and published in the book &ldquo;Contemporary Christian Cultures: Messages, Missions, and Dilemmas.&rdquo; Edited by Omatayo Banjo and Kesha Morant Williams, the volume features essays by 14 scholars and was released by Lexington Books as part of its Rhetoric, Race, and Religion Series.</p> <p>&ldquo;The book addresses issues of race and culture in religious life and how these issues impact the ways people individually and collectively live out their faith,&rdquo; said Ward. &ldquo;Media messages are a big part of that, and various chapters in the book cover topics such as faith-based political rhetoric, periodicals, social media and commercial music.&rdquo;</p> <p>In his essay, Ward points out that one in five American adults consume religious media on a daily basis and nearly half listen to religious radio in a given month, which is more than the percentage who attend a church. Further, one-fifth of all U.S. radio stations air a religious teaching, talk or music format.</p> <p>&ldquo;Because of media deregulation, ownership of these religious stations is dominated by large media corporations that determine what most people will hear,&rdquo; said Ward. &ldquo;My essay documents how African American voices are virtually absent on these networks, both on the air and in the boardroom.&rdquo;</p> <div class="mugshot right"> <div class="shot"><a href="images/uploads/20180214/constructing-narratives.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Bookcover Constructing Narratives in Response" src="images/uploads/20180214/constructing-narratives-100w.jpg" /> </a></div> </div> <p>Ward also joined 13 other scholars and editors Shing-Ling S. Chen, Nicole Allaire, and Zhuojun Joyce Chen to explore &ldquo;Constructing Narratives in Response to Trump&rsquo;s Election: How Various Populations Make Sense of an Unexpected Victory,&rdquo; released by Lexington Books. The volume features Ward&rsquo;s essay, &ldquo;The Dangers of Getting What You Wish For: What Do You Say to Evangelicals?&rdquo;</p> <p>&ldquo;The evangelical community debated whether to support Trump despite his character issues,&rdquo; Ward said. &ldquo;Ultimately, the pro-Trump message of the Christian Right, broadcast over Christian media, filtered down to the pulpits and the pews.&rdquo;</p> <p>In his essay, Ward examines how this process occurred.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>Ward&rsquo;s research on media and religion has drawn national attention, most recently last fall when he received the 2017 Clifford G. Christians Ethics Research Award for his books &ldquo;The Electronic Church in the Digital Age: Cultural Impacts of Evangelical Mass Media, Vols. 1 &amp; 2.&rdquo;</p>