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Die voorstandersrol in die daarstelling van 'n agenda van nuus oor die bewoonde omgewingVan Wyk, Gerrit 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--University of Stellenbosch, 2004. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The independent interpretation of a series of interviews shows provisionally that the
proponent of an issue is its scout and interpreter in the agenda-setting process. The
proponent thus helps to develop and adapt the scope of an issue so that it will appear as
a dyna"1ic subject on the media agenda.
The focus of this aSSignment falls on the proponents of the inhabited environment as a
career scientific development. The definition of this career scientific development was
adapted to suit an investigation in media studies.
The interview questions examined three topics: the issue proponent's profile, motivation
and discouragement to make contributions, and the technical skills and standards
needed 10 place an issue on the media agenda.
The profile of a proponent is that of scout and interpreter. The respondents mention the
stereoty~es media institutions maintain as the greatest demotivation and their love for
the inhabited environment as their greatest motivation. The respondents place a lot of
value on high joumalistic standards in the coverage of their issue. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Deur 'n onafhanklike interpretasie van 'n reeks onderhoude het hierdie werkstuk
VOOriOPipbewys dat voorstanders van'n bepaalde saak die verkenning en interpretasle
bepaal in die agendadaarstellingproses. As sulks help voorstanders om 'n kwessie se
omvang te ontwikkel en aan te pas sodat dit as 'n dinamiese onderwerp op die mediaagenda
verskyn.
Die fokus van hierdie werkstuk val op die voorstanders van die bewoonde omgewing as
beroepsretenskaPlike ontwikkeling. Die beroepswetenskaplike ontwikkeling se
omskrywing is aangepas om by 'n mediastudiesondersoek in te pas.
Die ondfrhoudvrae het drie afdelings ondersoek: die voorstander van 'n kwessie se
profiel, motivering en ontmoediging om bydraes te maak en, laastens, die tegniese
vaardighede en standaarde nodig om 'n kwessie op die media-agenda te plaas.
Die voorstanders se profiel is die van verkenner en interpreteerder. Die respondente
noem dir stereotipes wat media-instansies onderhou as die grootste ontmoediging en
hul liefde vir die bewoonde omgewing as die grootste motivering. Die respondente hag
baie waarde aan hoe joemalistieke standaarde om hul kwessie te dek.
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Where the global meets the local : South African youth and their experience of global mediaStrelitz, Larry Nathan January 2003 (has links)
Within the context of debates concerning the impact of global media on local youth, this study explores how a sample of South African youth responds to texts which were produced internationally, but distributed locally. Recognising the profound rootedness of media consumption in everyday life, the research examines the way these youth, differentially embedded in the South African economic and ideological formation, use these texts as part of their ongoing attempts to make sense of their lives. The study rejects the 'either/or' formulations that often accompany competing structuralist and culturalist approaches to text/audience relationships. Instead, using a combination of quantitative and qualitative research methods, it seeks to highlight the interplay between agency and structure, between individual choice and the structuring of experience by wider social and historical factors. The findings of the study point to the complex individual and social reasons that lie behind media consumption choices, and the diverse (and socially patterned) reasons why local audiences are either attracted to, or reject, global media. These and other findings, the study argues, highlight the deficiencies of the media imperialism thesis with its definitive claims for cultural homogenisation, seen as the primary, or most politically significant, effect of the globalisation of media. As such, this study should be read as a dialogue with those schools of thought that take a more unequivocal point of view on the impact of globalised media culture.
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Youth, media and lifestyles : an audience study on media (television) consumption and lifestyles of black youth living in both Durban and Alice, South Africa.Smith, Rene Alicia. January 2011 (has links)
Presented as a comparative analysis, this qualitative audience study tests the
hypothetic proposition that youths’ (1) consumption of media is mediated by
various socio-economic determinants as well as cultural and institutional
practices. In order to test this hypothesis, the research examines the media (more
specifically, television) consumption practices and lifestyles of black South
African youths living in an urban city (Durban) and a peri-urban town (Alice) at
a particular moment in time. Positioned as a historical study that reflects a specific period in the history of
television (and media) in South Africa, the study attempts to provide a snapshot
of youths, television consumption and lifestyles in post-apartheid South Africa.
It assesses the relationship between youths and media during a specific period,
namely, around a decade after South Africa’s first democratically elected
government and when the country was still in the throes of political and
economic change and transition. It assesses this relationship over a four-year
period (from 2002 to 2006) and reflects on this epoch in relation to the then
existing policy and regulatory framework as well as to the findings from other
relevant empirical research. The analysis reflects upon the social constructs of class and gender in relation to
the study’s broader findings on television consumption, which are derived from
qualitative and quantitative empirical data. It develops categories and typologies
of the lifestyles of youths towards this end and it concludes that youths’ media
consumption practices and the production and reproduction of lifestyles is a
complex matrix of ‘lived’ experiences, cultural identity and other socialising
factors such as age, race and class. Moreover, it shows that peoples’ media
choices and the related selection and appropriation of media are fundamentally
informed by specific policy and regulatory regime. Notwithstanding this, the
ways in which black South African youths use media (imported programming
or local television content, for example) and accordingly fashion their lifestyles,
remains largely determined by their class, their access to Information and
Communication Technologies (ICTs) and the proximity of the experiences
represented in the media to those with which they can identify. (1) I refer to youths (in the plural) in recognition of the heterogeneity of young people classically referred to as the amorphous group, youth. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2011.
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Burgerlike joernalistiek in die Suid-Afrikaanse konteks : 'n ondersoek na die insluiting van gemarginaliseerde gemeenskappe deur herberaming met verwysing na projekte van die Cape Argus en Kaapse-RapportTruter, Charlene 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2005. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Since South Africa’s transition from a nationalistic state to a democracy in 1994, debates
about the media’s role have intensified as the challenges and complexities of the South
African society unfolded. In this debate, which mainly played out between the
government and the media, the liberal theory and the developmental theory were used
as the two main normative positions from which to contest the media’s role. As
normative theories they describe the ideal role of the press within societal systems and
thus fall within the functionalist paradigm.
Historically, the liberal approach was seen as the accepted normative framework for the
media within a democracy to protect that very democracy. The liberal consensus
adopted by the post-apartheid media therefore came as no surprise. However, the
optimism initially experienced regarding the independence of the new, liberal media, its
professionalisation and economic restructuring, is gradually being challenged by the
critical perspective. This perspective questions the extent of transformation in a public
sphere where entrance is still restricted by class structures.
The argument of this paper is that although the above changes to the media landscape
are recognised as important, they do not account for issues of class and how the poor,
the spaces they live in and the factors impacting on their lives, are framed by the media.
This paper is presented as a normative undertaking and presents civic journalism as
alternative normative framework. It moves from the premise that the representations
afforded to the poor in die media are being hampered by the individualistic aims of the
Western, liberal, journalistic tradition.
The argument is further that the use of a community-driven approach should lead to
broader representation of the poor in the media and the inclusion of this currently
marginalised group in the public sphere. Reframing, one of the most important methods
of civic journalism, is singled out to explore the possibility of applying civic journalism to
the South African context. The motivation for this paper is the belief that the need exists
for a greater plurality of voices and discourses. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Sedert Suid-Afrika in 1994 beweeg het van ’n nasionalistiese staat na ’n demokrasie, het
die debat oor die rol van die media algaande verdiep namate die uitdagings en
kompleksiteite van die Suid-Afrikaanse situasie ontvou het. In die debat tussen die postapartheid
media en die regering was die twee normatiewe posisies van waar die media
se rol by uitstek betwis is, die libertynse en ontwikkelingsteorie. As normatiewe teorieë
wat die ideale rol van die pers binne samelewingsisteme verwoord, val dit binne die
funksionalistiese paradigma.
Histories word die liberale benadering gesien as die vanselfsprekende roete wat ’n media
binne ’n demokrasie moet volg om daardie demokrasie te beskerm. Die liberale
konsensus van die post-apartheid media was in die lig hiervan geen verrassing nie. Maar
die optimisme wat aanvanklik ervaar is oor die onafhanklike, liberale media, sy
professionalisering en ekonomiese herstrukturering, word algaande uitgedaag deur ’n
kritiese perspektief. Hierdie perspektief bevraagteken die waarde van ’n
getransformeerde media waar toelating tot die openbare sfeer steeds deur klasstrukture
gereguleer word.
Alhoewel die bogenoemde erken word as belangrike veranderinge, is die argument dat
die liberale normatiewe paradigma nie genoeg was om kwessies van klas te verreken en
hoe armes, die kwessies wat hulle lewens beïnvloed en die ruimtes waarin hulle ’n
bestaan maak, deur die media beraam word nie. Hierdie werkstuk is ’n normatiewe
onderneming wat burgerlike joernalistiek as normatiewe raamwerk wil voorstel. Die
uitgangspunt is dat representasie van armes in die media deur die individualistiese
doelstellings van die Westerse, liberale joernalistieke tradisie beperk word.
Die argument is verder dat die toepassing van ’n gemeenskapsgerigte benadering
behoort te lei tot ’n breër representasie van armes en die insluiting van dié tans
gemarginaliseerde gemeenskappe by die openbare sfeer. Herberaming, een van die
belangrikste metodes van burgerlike joernalistiek, word uitgesonder om die
toepassingsmoontlikheid van burgerlike joernalistiek as alternatief te ondersoek. Die
motivering vir die werkstuk is die oortuiging dat daar in die Suid-Afrikaanse
mediakonteks ’n behoefte bestaan aan ’n groter diversiteit van stemme en diskoerse.
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Beauty and the beach.Plunkett, Claudia Bernadette. January 2003 (has links)
This dissertation aims to interpret holiday imagery in the media, as a site of
South African cultural production, on the basis of newspaper images of local
white and black people published in the Natal Mercury from 1966 to 1996. A
strong historical approach (the history of the Western holiday) has been taken in order to analyze existing social structures relating to the holiday in South Africa, specifically gender, race and class. These social structures have been examined in depth, with the result of numerous interpretations being made about behaviour and the depiction of behaviour in the context of Durban beaches and leisure. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2003.
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Some principles of communicating effectively through press advertisements with BlacksKoekemoer, Ludi January 1978 (has links)
[Introduction] An investigation of relevant literature reveals numerous studies on the principles of effective advertising communications. These studies are based on work done overseas and may not apply to Blacks in South Africa. Pioneer advertising research into the Black market has been conducted in recent years by the University of South Africa's Bureau of Market Research (BM). The resultant data obtained indicated that communicating to the Black market should be treated separately from communicating to Whites in South Africa and further research is required on the effectiveness of advertising communications aimed at Blacks. This study was designed to supplement the research conducted by the Bureau of Market Research rather than to validate these findings.
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For the people : an appraisal comparison of imagined communities in letters to two South African newspapersSmith, Jade January 2013 (has links)
This thesis reports on the bonds that unify imagined communities (Anderson 1983) that are created in 40 letters prominently displayed on the opinions pages of the Daily Sun, a popular tabloid, and The Times, a daily offshoot of the mainstream national Sunday Times. An APPRAISAL analysis of these letters reveals how the imagined communities attempt to align their audiences around distinctive couplings of interpersonal and ideational meaning. Such couplings represent the bonds around which community identities are co-constructed through affiliation and are evidence of the shared feelings that unite the communities of readership. Inferences drawn from this APPRAISAL information allow for a comparison of the natures of the two communities in terms of how they view their agency and group cohesion. Central to the analysis and interpretation of the data is the letters’ evaluative prosody, traced in order to determine the polarity of readers’ stances over four weeks. Asymmetrical prosodies are construed as pointing to the validity of ‘linguistic ventriloquism’, a term whose definition is refined and used as a diagnostic for whether the newspapers use their readers’ letters to promote their own stances on controversial matters. Principal findings show that both communities affiliate around the value of education, and dissatisfaction with the country’s political leaders, however The Times’ readers are more individualistic than the Daily Sun’s community members, who are concerned with the wellbeing of the group. The analysis highlights limitations to the application of the APPRAISAL framework, the value of subjectivity in the analytical process, and adds a new dimension to South African media studies, as it provides linguistic insights into the construction of imagined communities of newspaper readership.
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A critical discourse analysis of strategies used to construct South African initiation schools in online news reports and discussion forumsFynn, Angelo 08 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the discourse strategies used to construct initiation schools in online media and message boards. The focus is on understanding the tensions that come with enacting traditional practices in the face of modernity and its associated cultural expectations. The thesis describes the manner in which these tensions are constructed in text by the media in news reports and participants in discussion forums. While there is still debate around whether the internet will revolutionise public participation and create a digital utopia; the internet is acknowledged as one of the widest reaching sources of information and entertainment. Specifically, the internet provides a platform to challenge the traditionally top-down communication between the elite, who have privileged access to the media, and the general public, who were previously constructed as passive recipients of information. Using the male circumcision initiation rite, this thesis examines how the South African public discursively constructs the epistemic location of African traditions in South Africa. The study drew on a sample of news articles from the News24 site, the largest news site in South Africa, ranging from January 2008 to December 2013. A corpus of 62 articles were analysed using the Critical Discourse Analysis technique described by Teun van Dijk. The findings of the thesis were that the initiation rite is used as a rhetorical tool to argue for the abandonment of African cultural practices in favour of modern, Western influenced beliefs and values. The findings also indicate that the initiation rite is reduced to the act of circumcision in the media by focusing on the injury and deaths of the initiates and excluding the meaning of the rite as a meaningful cultural practice. The conclusion of the thesis challenges the epistemicide committed against the male circumcision initiation rite from within the Decolonial school of thought, which critically examines everyday interaction for universalising, normative language that aims to commit cultural epistemicide to reinforce the white, male, European, Christian traditions of masculinity. / Psychology / D. Litt. et Phil. (Psychology)
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'n Ondersoek van Afrikaanssprekendes se behoeftes aan Afrikaanse televisieprogramme : 'n gevallestudieGrobler, Johannes Marthinus 06 1900 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / Hierdie studie ondersoek die behoeftes van Afrikaanse televisiekykers aan Afrikaanse
televisieprogramme te midde van die veranderinge wat sedert demokratisering aan die
Suid-Afrikaanse medialandskap plaasvind. Hierdie behoeftes word ondersoek by wyse
van 'n gevallestudie ender graad 10-leerders in Pretoria. Die gebruike- en
bevredigingsbenadering dien as teoretiese onderbou vir die studie en die invloed van 'n
aantal veranderlikes word ondersoek. Hierdie veranderlikes is televisiegerig (inhoud,
aanbod en struktuur van Afrikaanse programme), tegnologiegerig (nuwe mediategnologiee
socs satelliettelevisie en die Internet) en kykergerig (sosio-kulturele, persoonlike en
demografiese faktore). Die studie bevind dat daar 'n verband is tussen hierdie
veranderlikes en respondente se behoeftes aan Afrikaanse televisieprogramme. Die
studie bevind dat Afrikaanse programme nie respondente se behoeftes bevredig nie.
Nuwe mediategnologiee verbreed respondente se sosio-kulturele horlE;onne sodat hulle
gemaklik met programme in Engels omgaan. Te midde van die toenemende aanbod van
oorsese programme in Engels, neem die behoefte aan Afrikaanse programme af. / This study investigates the need for Afrikaans television programmes among Afrikaans
viewers in the changing media environment in South Africa. Needs are studied by means
of a case study among grade 10 learners in Pretoria. The uses and gratifications
approach serves as the theoretical framework of the study and a number of variables are
investigated. These variables are television driven (supply, content and structure),
technology driven (new media technologies such as satellite television and the Internet)
and viewer driven (socio-cultural, personal and demographic factors). The study finds that
there is a connection between these variables and the need for Afrikaans programmes
among respondents. The supply, content and structure of Afrikaans programmes do not
gratify respondents' needs. New media technologies broaden respondents' socio-cultural
horizons, enabling them to comfortably watch English programmes. Amidst the increasing
supply of overseas programmes in English, the need for Afrikaans programmes is
diminishing / Communication Science / M. A. (Kommunikasiekunde)
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A critical discourse analysis of strategies used to construct South African initiation schools in online news reports and discussion forumsFynn, Angelo 08 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the discourse strategies used to construct initiation schools in online media and message boards. The focus is on understanding the tensions that come with enacting traditional practices in the face of modernity and its associated cultural expectations. The thesis describes the manner in which these tensions are constructed in text by the media in news reports and participants in discussion forums. While there is still debate around whether the internet will revolutionise public participation and create a digital utopia; the internet is acknowledged as one of the widest reaching sources of information and entertainment. Specifically, the internet provides a platform to challenge the traditionally top-down communication between the elite, who have privileged access to the media, and the general public, who were previously constructed as passive recipients of information. Using the male circumcision initiation rite, this thesis examines how the South African public discursively constructs the epistemic location of African traditions in South Africa. The study drew on a sample of news articles from the News24 site, the largest news site in South Africa, ranging from January 2008 to December 2013. A corpus of 62 articles were analysed using the Critical Discourse Analysis technique described by Teun van Dijk. The findings of the thesis were that the initiation rite is used as a rhetorical tool to argue for the abandonment of African cultural practices in favour of modern, Western influenced beliefs and values. The findings also indicate that the initiation rite is reduced to the act of circumcision in the media by focusing on the injury and deaths of the initiates and excluding the meaning of the rite as a meaningful cultural practice. The conclusion of the thesis challenges the epistemicide committed against the male circumcision initiation rite from within the Decolonial school of thought, which critically examines everyday interaction for universalising, normative language that aims to commit cultural epistemicide to reinforce the white, male, European, Christian traditions of masculinity. / Psychology / D. Litt. et Phil. (Psychology)
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