How does the media decide which stories to cover on any given day? And what gets left out when the stories that are chosen get transformed into a three-minute segment on the nightly news or into a column of print in the daily paper? These are some of the issues that Beth Loffreda takes up in Losing Matt Shepard: Life and Politics in the Aftermath of Anti-Gay Murder, her book-length study of how the residents of Wyoming responded when Shepard, a young gay student at the university in Laramie, was brutally beaten and left to die by the side of the road in Fall 1998. Both an ethnographic study and a cultural critique, Losing Matt Shepard explores and carefully details the limits of the media's representation of the complexities of life in Wyoming after Shepard's highly publicized murder. In his review of Losing Matt Shepard for the Lambda Book Report, Malcolm Farley recommended that, "[a]nyone who cares about the gay experience in America-or about America in general--should read Loffreda's fiercely intelligent account of the causes and consequences of Matt Shepard's murder."
Beth Loffreda is an assistant professor of English and adjunct professor of women's studies at the University of Wyoming, where she also serves as an adviser to the university's gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered student group. Since the publication of Losing Matt Shepard, which was selected as a finalist for the American Library Association's Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Round Table Award in 2000, Loffreda has become a national spokesperson in discussions about hate-crime legislation and gay rights. She was also recognized as one of the University of Wyoming's top teachers in 1999. In the selection from Losing Matt Shepard included here, Loffreda shows just how varied the response to Shepard's murder was at the University of Wyoming, in the surrounding communities of Laramie, and across the nation. As she does so, Loffreda asks her readers to consider the following question: Why it is that, when there are so many murders every year, this one in particular captured the nation's attention? |