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Science Communication
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Framing of Kennewick Man against the Backdrop of a Scientific and Cultural Controversy

Cynthia-Lou Coleman

Portland State University, ccoleman{at}pdx.edu

Erin V. Dysart

Portland State University

The authors examine news coverage surrounding the unearthing of an ancient skeleton known as Kennewick Man. The skeleton was the focus of legal arguments from 1996 to 2004, with a group of scientists countering Indian claims that the skeleton should be rightfully repatriated to the North American tribes. The authors take a case-study approach, examining the theoretical underpinnings of scientific and cultural rationality in contemporary ways of knowing and linking them with communitarian ethics offered by Clifford Christians and others. Through an examination of mass media framing, the authors show how coverage has resulted in a discourse that has limited discussion to a division of rationalities. In this case, rationalist and cultural value sunfold with scant attendance to ethical or pluralistic considerations.

Key Words: American Indian • cultural rationality • ethics • framing • Kennewick Man • mass communication • NAGPRA • Native American • news • pluralism • reporting • science coverage • scientific rationality • sources

Science Communication, Vol. 27, No. 1, 3-26 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/1075547005278609


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