Sexism and racism in South Africa’s TV industry

Q4 Arts and Humanities AGENDA Pub Date : 2022-10-02 DOI:10.1080/10130950.2022.2148875
Tiisetso Tlelima
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Abstract

abstract This profile looks at misogyny and anti-blackness within South Africa’s film and television industry, both on screen and off screen, and the direct link that representation has to the way we live our lives. The central question is regarding how popular culture shapes our lives and the way we see ourselves. South Africa’s television industry is booming. Viewers have more content to choose from than 20 years ago when they only had the option of a few soaps and dramas. More black people are working in the industry as writers, directors and producers – yet the content being created still reproduces sexist and racist images of black people for profit. White supremacist capitalist patriarchy, which is indicative of the power structures that remain unchanged, is the only lens through which black life is seen and represented. The article will provide an analysis of the industry within the broader context of moviemaking and Hollywood, drawing on the works of bell hooks (1997) and Stuart Hall (1997). It includes interviews with writer Bongi Ndaba and feminist and activist Rosie Motene on their experiences in working in the industry as black women and what resistance should look like.
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南非电视行业的性别歧视和种族主义
这篇简介着眼于南非电影和电视行业中的厌女症和反黑人现象,无论是在银幕上还是银幕下,以及这种表现与我们生活方式的直接联系。核心问题是流行文化如何塑造我们的生活和我们看待自己的方式。南非的电视产业正在蓬勃发展。与20年前相比,观众可以选择的内容更多了,当时他们只能选择几部肥皂剧和电视剧。越来越多的黑人在这个行业担任编剧、导演和制片人——然而,正在创作的内容仍然在复制黑人的性别歧视和种族主义形象,以获取利润。白人至上主义的资本主义父权制,是权力结构保持不变的标志,是观察和代表黑人生活的唯一镜头。本文将在电影制作和好莱坞的更广泛背景下对该行业进行分析,借鉴bell hooks(1997)和Stuart Hall(1997)的作品。它包括对作家Bongi Ndaba和女权主义者和活动家Rosie Motene的采访,讲述了她们作为黑人女性在这个行业工作的经历,以及应该如何抵抗。
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