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Research

Dr. Debra Merskin, Ph.D. (Syracuse)  is a teacher and scholar who is committed to removing the veil from re-presentations of any and all beings who are shown in limited and limiting ways. She has published multiple journal articles, book chapters, and encyclopedia entries on media representations of constructed “Others” in American media. This includes animals other than human. Her theoretical emphasis is stereotypes, representational ethics, and speciesism. Her first book, Media, Minorities, & Meaning: A Critical Introduction (Peter Lang, 2010) looks below the surface of media content to explore the psychological, social, and economic underpinnings of a system of beliefs that result in prejudice, discrimination, and oppression. Designed to raise awareness of the foundations of historically-based inequities in the American social, cultural, and economic milieu, the book illustrates how inequalities are maintained, at least in part, by mass media, popular culture, and advertising representations.

Her second book, Sexing the Media: How and Why We Do It (Peter Lang, 2014) explores how media and other social institutions use sex and sexuality (the capacity to have erotic experiences and responses) to advance economic and ideological interests. Cinema, music, music videos, television programs, advertising, and the Internet are discussed as carriers of deliberately constructed messages that contribute to and support a master narrative that privileges heterosexuality and monogamy. 

Dr. Merskin’s latest book, Seeing Species: Re-presentations of Animals in Media & Popular Culture (Peter Lang, 2018)  explores the intersectionality of species, race, and sex. Chapters examine the human/animal divide, how children learn empathy, and examines the use of animals in media, tracking species from appearances in rock art and picture books to contemporary portrayals in television programs and movies. Primary questions explored include: Where does thinking of other beings in a detached, impersonal, and objectified way come from? Do the mass media contribute to this distancing? When did humans first think about animals as other others? The main themes include examining the persistence of the human-animal divide, parallels in the treatment of otherized human beings and animals, and the role of media in either liberating or limiting real animals.

In addition to an earlier career in advertising, Dr. Merskin studies animals and psychology. She has completed coursework for a second Ph.D. in ecological psychology at Pacifica Graduate Institute. She is active in the animal welfare community serving as an advisory board member for the Kimmela Center for Animal Advocacy, Predator Defense, and The Humane Education Coalition. She is a board member of Fawn Hills Animal Sanctuary.  Along with Dr. Carrie Freeman, she co-founded the web site and media style guide site animalsandmedia.org

Recent Publications

Merskin, D. (2019). Editor. The Sage International Encyclopedia of Mass Media & Society.

Merskin, D. (2018). Seeing species: Re-presentations of animals in media and popular culture.   

Merskin, D. (2014). Sexing the media: How and why we do it.

Merskin, D. (2011). Media, minorities, and meaning: A critical introduction.

Marino, L., & Merskin, D. (2019). Intelligence, complexity, and individuality in sheep. Animal Sentience, 4(25). https://animalstudiesrepository.org/animsent/vol4/iss25/1/

Cordes, A., & Merskin, D. (2019). #DontTrendonMe: Addressing appropriation of Native  American-ness in Millennial social media. In C. Campbell & L. Coleman (Eds.), Media,  myth, and millennials (pp. 177-196). New York: Lexington Books.

Ferdowsian, H., & Merskin, D. (2012). Parallels in sources of trauma, pain, distress, and suffering in humans and nonhuman animals. Journal of Trauma & Dissociation, 13(4), 448-468.

Merskin, D. (2019). Mia had a little lamb: Gender and species stereotypes in LEGO® sets.  S. Mazzarella & R. Hains (Eds.), More than just bricks: Critical perspectives on LEGO® in popular Culture.

Merskin, D. (2019). Across the great divide. Commentary.  C. A. Chapman & M. A. Huffman     (2019). Why do we want to think humans are different? Animal Sentience, 23(41). https://animalstudiesrepository.org/animsent/vol3/iss23/41/

Merskin, D. (2017). Getting to the other side. Commentary.  L. Marino (2018). The inconvenient truth about thinking chickens.  Animal Sentience, 17(5).         https://animalstudiesrepository.org/animsent/vol2/iss17/5/

Merskin, D. (2015). Media theories and the crossroads of critical animal and media studies. In N. Almiron, M. Cole, & C. P. Freeman (Eds.). Critical animal and media studies:      Communication for nonhuman animal advocacy. New York: Routledge.

Freeman, C., & Merskin, D. (2015). Respectful representation: An animal issues style guide for all media practitioners. In N. Almiron, M. Cole, & C. P. Freeman (Eds.). Critical animal and media studies: Communication for nonhuman animal advocacy. New York:    Routledge.