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Humour as "cultural reconciliation" in South African situation comedy : an ethnographic study of multicultural female viewers.Roome, Dorothy M. January 1998 (has links)
South African women of different ethnicity and background, having lived under apartheid, are
now challenged by the freedoms expressed in the Bill of Rights and the new Constitution. This
study, identifying the connections between gender, race, class and social relations, incorporates
an ethnographic methodology and a cultural studies perspective in the reception analysis of
thirteen multicultural focus groups. In the analysis of their response to two locally produced
situation comedies, Suburban Bliss and Going Up III, the effort to determine existing cultural
barriers is made, examining laughter as a benchmark for the comprehension by women from
different backgrounds. The theoretical framework for the research evaluates the extent to which
the writers, producers and directors created a text which connects with the multicultural women
viewers' reality. Changes affecting the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) in terms
of broadcasting policy, are traced, and a brief history of the organization since the inception of
broadcasting in South Africa is incorporated. Language policy had ret1ected the overt political
ideology of Afrikaner nationalism, consequently the political changes resulting from the 1994
democratic election led to major transformations in language and style of programming to
incorporate local content for multicultural audiences. This caused economic hardship for the
SABC, as advertising revenue was drastically curtailed.
Textual analysis of both Suburban Bliss and Going Up III employed a mix of structural,
semiotics, and ideological analysis. Through interviews with the production team it became
apparent that SB was based on American sitcom genre, while GU III is a hybrid combination,
conceived to meet the perceived needs of the local multilingual multicultural audience. The extent
to which the programmes mediate the producer/audience relationship, contributing to the
hegemonic process is investigated, as the interpretation of the text can be different in the decoding
from that originally intended by the producer or encoder when creating the programme. The
situation comedies by depicting in a humorous vein the realities of affirmative action, adult access
to pornography, the aspirations of the new black elite, feminine participation in the democratic
process, and the rejection of authoritarian censorship from the state or the home indicates the
ideological position of the production teams.
The responses of the focus groups were examined in terms of their own identity as well as where
an historic individuality expands into the collective communities of nations, gender, classes,
generations, race and ethnic groups. Identity was perceived as connected but distinct and
separate, as any event can affect both individuals and society. The thesis explores the proposition that humour as 'cultural reconcilation' can be effective if people are prepared to alter negative patterns of thinking and social practices. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1998.
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