Frames and Marginalisation of Counter-hegemonic Voices: Media Representation of the Land Debate in South Africa

IF 1.1 3区 文学 Q3 COMMUNICATION African Journalism Studies Pub Date : 2022-01-02 DOI:10.1080/23743670.2022.2033289
Mandla J. Radebe, S. Chiumbu
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT The South African commercial press marginalises alternative and counter-hegemonic voices partly due to its location in the capitalist power structures. Notwithstanding its transformation post-apartheid, the ethos of this media remains rooted in apartheid-like economic and ideological rationalities. This media still functions within Western news values and a neoliberal paradigm; hence, the reporting of ideological discourses delegitimises the concerns of the dispossessed. This paper uses the critical political economy of the media in conversation with decolonial theories to analyse the media’s representation of the land debate by assessing economic and political interrelations that shape its structures and practice. Stories in the South African English-language print media in 2018 are analysed using thematic and framing approaches. It emerges that the land debate is framed negatively. The media employed a narrow neoliberal frame in the stories and thus failed to support a legitimate discourse. Instead, the media gave voice to individuals located in capitalist production structures who defended the status quo.
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反霸权声音的框架和边缘化:南非土地辩论的媒体表现
摘要南非商务印书馆将另类和反霸权的声音边缘化,部分原因是其位于资本主义权力结构中。尽管这种媒体在种族隔离后发生了转变,但其精神仍然植根于种族隔离式的经济和意识形态理性。这种媒体仍然在西方新闻价值观和新自由主义范式中发挥作用;因此,意识形态话语的报道剥夺了被剥夺者的关注。本文利用媒体的批判性政治经济学与非殖民化理论进行对话,通过评估影响其结构和实践的经济和政治相互关系,分析媒体对土地辩论的表现。使用主题和框架方法分析了2018年南非英语印刷媒体的故事。土地辩论的框架是负面的。媒体在报道中采用了狭隘的新自由主义框架,因此未能支持合法的话语。相反,媒体为资本主义生产结构中捍卫现状的个人发声。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
10.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: Accredited by the South African Department of Higher Education and Training for university research purposes African Journalism Studies subscribes to the Code of Best Practice for Peer Reviewed Scholarly Journals of the Academy of Science of South Africa. African Journalism Studies ( AJS) aims to contribute to the ongoing extension of the theories, methodologies and empirical data to under-researched areas of knowledge production, through its emphasis on African journalism studies within a broader, comparative perspective of the Global South. AJS strives for theoretical diversity and methodological inclusivity, by developing theoretical approaches and making critical interventions in global scholarly debates. The journal''s comparative and interdisciplinary approach is informed by the related fields of cultural and media studies, communication studies, African studies, politics, and sociology. The field of journalism studies is understood broadly, as including the practices, norms, value systems, frameworks of representation, audiences, platforms, industries, theories and power relations that relate to the production, consumption and study of journalism. A wide definition of journalism is used, which extends beyond news and current affairs to include digital and social media, documentary film and narrative non-fiction.
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