Document details

Media, Identity and the Public Sphere in Post-Apartheid South Africa

Leiden: Brill (2003), 194 pp.

Series: International Studies in Sociology and Social Anthropology, 88

ISBN 978-90-04-47404-8 (pdf); 978-90-04-12633-6 (pbk)

"The essays in this collection reveal that the social and political development of post-apartheid South Africa depends to an important degree on the evolving cultural, social and political identities of its diverse population and on the role of the media of mass communications in the country's new multicultural democracy. The popular struggle against the country's former apartheid regime and the on-going democratisation of South African politics have generated enormous creativity and inspiration as well as many contradictions and unfulfilled expectations. In the present period of social transformation, the legacy of the country's past is both a source of continuing conflict and tension as well as a cause for celebration and hope [...] South Africa's media of mass communications have an important role to play in the process of unprecedented social transformation - both in developing the respect for differences and the overarching identity as well as providing the public forum and the channels of communication needed for the successful development of the country's multicultural democracy. In South Africa, the democratization of the media must go hand in hand with the democratization of the political system in order to ensure that the majority of the citizenry participate effectively in the country's multicultural democracy. Topics covered include The "Struggle for African Identity: Thabo Mbeki's African Renaissance", "Between the Local and the Global: South African Languages and the Internet", "Shooting the East/Veils and Masks: Uncovering Orientalism in South African Media" and "Black and White in Ink: Discourses of Resistance in South African Cartooning." (Publisher description)
Introduction / Abebe Zegeye an Richard L. Harris, 1
The Struggle fur African Identity: Thabo Mbeki's African Renaissance / Pal Ahluwalia, 27
How Good is the South African Media für Democracy? Mapping the South African Public Sphere after Apartheid / Sean Jacobs, 41
Between the Local and the Global: South African Languages and the Internet / Herman Wasserman, 65
A Matter of Colour / Abebe Zegeye, 85
Unsung Heroines: Media Reflections of' the Social Conflict in South Africa / Elizabeth Le Roux, 111
Shooting the East/Veils and Masks: Uncovering Orientalism in South African Media / Gabeba Baderoon, 129
Black and White in Ink: Discourses of Resistance in South African Cartooning / Andy Mason, 147
Opportunities and Challenges of New Technologies in Media and Communication: The Windhoek Declaration / Thembisa Mjwagu, 169