Document details

The Press of Africa: Persecution and Perseverance

London; Basingstoke: Macmillan (1979), xi, 304 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 288-290, index

ISBN 0-333-24521-0

Other editions: New York: Africana Publishing, 1979, 304 p.

Signature commbox: 100:20-General 1979

"As political freedom came to the Continent, so did press freedom disappear," is Barton's opening sentence. Although his attitude is definitely colonial, this statement is not as prejudiced as it first appears, for he attempts to put it in a historical perspective by making the case that this trend in Africa has happened in many non-African countries which today claim some sort of press freedom. Against this background he surveys in breadth rather than depth first the white colonial press and then the emergent black press in French-speaking Africa, East and Central Africa, Portuguese Africa, "the White South," Swaziland, and "unconquered Africa" - Liberia and Ethiopia. He omits Arab Africa because he feels the cultural differences to be too great." (Eleanor Blum, Frances G. Wilhoit: Mass media bibliography. 3rd ed. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1990 Nr. 27)
I THE EXPANDING CONTINENT WITH THE SHRINKING PRESS, 1
2 WEST AFRICA: A BLACK PRESS FOR BLACK MEN, 13
3 THE COMING OF THE EUROPEANS, 31
4 THE GOING OF THE EUROPEANS, 43
5 FRENCH-SPEAKING AFRICA: A DIFFERENT SHADE OF WHITE, 59
6 EAST AFRICA
Kenya: A White Press for White Men, 71
Uganda: The Killing of the Press and the Pressmen, 96
Tanzania: The Cyclone in a Sari, 109
7 CENTRAL AFRICA
Zambia: The President's Men, 125
Malawi: The President's Press, 153
8 PORTUGUESE AFRICA: FROM FASCISM TO MARXISM, 169
9 THE WHITE SOUTH, 185
South Africa: The Press and Apartheid, 185
Rhodesia: The Press and the Rebels, 218
10 SWAZILAND: THE LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL, 244
I I UNCONQUERED AFRICA
Liberia: Tammany Hall in the Tropics, 250
Ethiopia: The Mixture as Before, 256
12 MANY VOICES, MANY PLANS, 263
13 FREEDOM-AND AFTER, 274