{"title":"The Constructions of Ndebele Identity in Skyz Metro FM: An Audience Reception Study","authors":"M. N. Sibanda","doi":"10.1177/00219096241230493","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Discourses on the negotiation and construction of ethnic identities in Zimbabwe have preoccupied scholars across disciplines, ranging from history, sociology, anthropology, and most recently media and communication studies. This study proceeds against the background that in Zimbabwe, literature on the relationship between identity formation and the media is little and far between, while available studies are limited to textual and discourse analysis. This inquiry takes a reception study approach to find out how audiences physically interact with radio content and negotiate different identity categories through qualitative in-depth interviews. This study extends this scope to the examination of how the advent of Skyz Metro FM has aided representation to extend discursive construction of identities. The study shows how a sense of belonging to Ndebele identity has been shaped by various changing power dynamics of internal and external factors in ways that allows one to understand how the production of national identity impact on the expression of belonging to Ndebele ethnic identity. The analysis is framed on the premise that like most collective identities, Ndebele identity has been flexible, fluid, negotiable, complex, shifting and contested but it centrally argues that Ndebele identity gels around key markers such as language. The relationship between broadcasting and ethnic nationalism found clear expression in Skyz Metro’s deliberate adoption of the slogan Esabantu (for the people) and maintains the station’s signature which is deployed throughout its programming.","PeriodicalId":506002,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Asian and African Studies","volume":"10 23","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Asian and African Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/00219096241230493","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Discourses on the negotiation and construction of ethnic identities in Zimbabwe have preoccupied scholars across disciplines, ranging from history, sociology, anthropology, and most recently media and communication studies. This study proceeds against the background that in Zimbabwe, literature on the relationship between identity formation and the media is little and far between, while available studies are limited to textual and discourse analysis. This inquiry takes a reception study approach to find out how audiences physically interact with radio content and negotiate different identity categories through qualitative in-depth interviews. This study extends this scope to the examination of how the advent of Skyz Metro FM has aided representation to extend discursive construction of identities. The study shows how a sense of belonging to Ndebele identity has been shaped by various changing power dynamics of internal and external factors in ways that allows one to understand how the production of national identity impact on the expression of belonging to Ndebele ethnic identity. The analysis is framed on the premise that like most collective identities, Ndebele identity has been flexible, fluid, negotiable, complex, shifting and contested but it centrally argues that Ndebele identity gels around key markers such as language. The relationship between broadcasting and ethnic nationalism found clear expression in Skyz Metro’s deliberate adoption of the slogan Esabantu (for the people) and maintains the station’s signature which is deployed throughout its programming.
关于津巴布韦民族身份的协商和构建的讨论一直困扰着各学科的学者,包括历史学、社会学、人类学以及最近的媒体与传播研究。本研究的背景是,在津巴布韦,有关身份认同的形成与媒体之间关系的文献少之又少,而现有的研究也仅限于文本和话语分析。本研究采用接收研究的方法,通过定性深入访谈,了解受众如何与广播内容进行实际互动,以及如何协商不同的身份类别。本研究将这一范围扩展到研究 Skyz Metro FM 的出现如何帮助表述扩展身份的话语建构。研究表明,恩德贝勒身份的归属感是如何被内部和外部因素的各种不断变化的权力动态所塑造的,从而使人们能够理解国家身份的产生是如何影响恩德贝勒民族身份归属感的表达的。分析的前提是,与大多数集体身份认同一样,恩德贝勒身份认同也具有灵活性、流动性、可协商性、复杂性、多变性和争议性,但分析的中心论点是,恩德贝勒身份认同是围绕语言等关键标志形成的。Skyz Metro 特意采用了 Esabantu(为人民服务)的口号,并在整个节目中保留了电视台的标志,这清楚地体现了广播与民族主义之间的关系。