Cultural identity and new communication technologies: political, ethnic and ideological implications
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Hershey, Pa.
Information Science Reference
2011
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Schriftenreihe: | Premier reference source
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | "This book presents a careful blend of conceptual, theoretical and applied research in new communication technologies,examining content that places new communication technologies in a context that recognizes their seamless integration into the designs of politics and culture"--Provided by publisher. |
Beschreibung: | XXVIII, 399 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9781609605919 |
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adam_text | Cultural Identity and
New Communication
Technologies:
Political, Ethnic and Ideological
Implications
D Ndirangu Wachanga
University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, USA
Information Science
REFERENCE
Table of Contents
Foreword xiv
Preface xxii
Acknowledgment xxviii
Section 1
Emerging Media, Community, and Identity (Re)Construction
Chapter 1
Challenging Traditional Media Hegemonic Practices: A Kenyan Case
D Ndirangu Wachanga, University of Wisconsin- Whitewater, USA
Chapter 2
Identity and the New Communication Technologies: Evidence from Kenya 23
Nathan Oyori Ogechi, Moi University, Kenya
Emily Bosire-Ogechi, Moi University, Kenya
Chapter 3
New Media in Kenya: Putting Ethnicity in Perspective 40
Martin C Njoroge, Kenyatta University, Kenya
Purity Kitnani, Kenyatta University, Kenya
Bernard J Kikech, Kenyatta University, Kenya
Chapter 4
The Role of New Information and Communication Technologies (NICTs) in the Relations
between the Central Government and Four Major Kingdoms in Uganda 66
George Musambira, University of Central Florida, USA
Samuel Muwanguzi, University of North Texas, USA
Chapter 5
The Cultural, Economic and Political Implications of New Media: A Case Study on Mobile
Telephony among University Students in Kenya 90
Frederick Kang ethe Iraki, United States International University, Kenya
Chapter 6
New Media and Gender in East Africa: Assessing Media Dependency and Public Attitudes 110
Uche Onyebadi, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, USA
Yusuf Kalyango Jr, Ohio University, USA
Chapter 7
Whose TV is it Anyway? An Examination of the Shift towards Satellite
Television in Zimbabwe 128
Rick Malleus, Seattle University, USA
Chapter 8
Wiring African Newsrooms: The Internet and Mainstream Print Journalism
Practice in Zimbabwe 144
Hayes Mawindi Mabweazara, University College Falmouth, UK
Section 2
Emerging Media, Language, Pop Culture, and Health Communication
Chapter 9
Textualizing the HIV/AIDS Motif in Theatre-Against-AIDS Performances in Kenya 164
Mahiri Mwita, Princeton University, USA
Chapter 10
New Media and Health Communication: Communication Strategies in Malaria
Control in Nigeria 197
Nwachukwu Andrew Egbunike, University oflbadan, Nigeria
Chapter 11
Translanguaging and Negotiation of Ethnicity: Reproduction of Hegemonic Structures in
Communication Media 213
Peter Githinji, Ohio University, USA
Chapter 12
Veganporn com amp; Sistah: Explorations of Whiteness through Textual Linguistic
Cyberminstrelsy on the Internet 235
Amie Breeze Harper, University of California-Davis, USA
Chapter 13
Language and Performing Arts: East African Hip Hop and Public Sensitization for
Political Change 256
E Sangai Mohochi, Maseno University, Kenya
D Ndirangu Wachanga, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, USA
Section 3
Emerging Media, Global Politics, and Cultural Transformation
Chapter 14
Mediating Identity and Culture: Nigerian Videos and African Immigrants in the U S 273
Adedayo Ladigbolu Abah, Washington and Lee University, USA
Chapter 15
The Role of Mass Mediated Messages and Cultural Identity with Cross-Cultural
Communication Failures Resulting from Flawed U S Military Policy in Iraq 294
Jim Schnell, Ohio Dominican University, USA
Chapter 16
New Media and Hegemonic Discourse in Pakistan 304
Saman Talib, Beaconhouse National University, Pakistan
Sadia Gardezi, Lahore School of Economics, Pakistan
Chapter 17
The World Narrow Web: Internet Content Regulation in South Korea 320
Siho Nam, University of North Florida, USA
Chapter 18
An Agent for Change: The Internet is Setting New Agendas in China 337
Jiafei Yin, Central Michigan University, USA
Compilation of References 359
About the Contributors 390
Index 394
Detailed Table of Contents
Foreword xiv
Preface xxii
Acknowledgment xxviii
Section 1
Emerging Media, Community, and Identity (Re)Construction
Chapter 1
Challenging Traditional Media Hegemonic Practices: A Kenyan Case
D Ndirangu Wachanga, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, USA
The top-bottom model espoused by the traditional media structures is being problematized by the
emerging technological changes Kenya presents an example of bottom-up model, which is a chal-
lenge to the hegemonic potential of top-down model We seek to establish how media in Kenya have
been operating within a top-bottom model until recently The emergence of the new communication
technologies (NCTs) have allowed individuals to challenge dominant voices, mythologies, symbols,
vocabulary, and politico-social structures around which the luminal rituals of the national have been
interwoven for the sole purpose of fostering national cohesion We submit that the proliferation of
NCTs and communication strategies have dismembered the nation by stimulating exponential multi-
plication of discursive regimes that may have been impossible previously when media technologies
were confined to the control of a central authority Although there is a fundamental shift from 19th and
20th century media, there remains a strong top-down component in the media but bottom-up is now
significant It is from this background that we point to the vulnerability of NCTs to manipulation and
co-option by the dominant, but hasten to mention that these technologies serve as a potential conduit to
alter dominant hegemonic designs
Chapter 2
Identity and the New Communication Technologies: Evidence from Kenya 23
Nathan Oyori Ogechi, Moi University, Kenya
Emily Bosire-Ogechi, Moi University, Kenya
New technology is not always used to portray and perpetuate narrow ethnic identities; rather, instances
exist when the users want to project professional and national identities Supported with data that fo-
cus on the pre- and post-2007 elections, the chapter argues that inasmuch as the New Communication
Technologies are good, great caution should be exercised when using them since unchecked use might
bring untold suffering to society
Chapter 3
New Media in Kenya: Putting Ethnicity in Perspective 40
Martin C Njoroge, Kenyatta University, Kenya
Purity Kimani, Kenyatta University, Kenya
Bernard J Kikech, Kenyatta University, Kenya
The way the media process, frame, and pass on information either to the government or to the people
shall affect the function of the political system The media may lead to dysfunction in some cases This
chapter seeks to outline and discuss the interaction between new media and ethnicity in Kenya The
chapter investigates ways in which the new media reinforced issues relating to ethnicity in Kenya prior
to the 2007 presidential election
Chapter 4
The Role of New Information and Communication Technologies (NICTs) in the Relations
between the Central Government and Four Major Kingdoms in Uganda 66
George Musambira, University of Central Florida, USA
Samuel Miwanguzi, University of North Texas, USA
The role NICTs are playing in the relations between Uganda s central government and four of the
kingdoms in the country is analyzed and placed in the historical context Within this contet, each king-
dom has pursued a strategy for preservation and development of its people s unique culture and ethnic
aspirations A convergence of cell phone and FM radio designed by the Buganda kingdom to confront
the central government with specific demands and the government s response are examined The less
combative use of NICTs by Bunyoro-Kitara, Busoga, and Toro kingdoms is described
Chapter 5
The Cultural, Economic and Political Implications of New Media: A Case Study on Mobile
Telephony among University Students in Kenya 90
Frederick Kang ethe Iraki, United States International University, Kenya
In this study we investigate the extent to which the cell phone technology has impacted the lives of
young Kenyans, especially within the context of a university in Kenya Kenya has had a tremendous
technological leap from the 1990s where landlines were the main tools of communication, to mobile
telephony where people can now communicate any time, any place
Chapter 6
New Media and Gender in East Africa: Assessing Media Dependency and Public Attitudes 110
Uche Onyebadi, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, USA
Yusuf Kalyango Jr, Ohio University, USA
This study set out to ascertain the use of and dependency on new media technology for political com-
munication by voting- age citizens of the three main East African countries, namely Kenya, Uganda,
and Tanzania We learn the importance of new media communication opportunities towards the strug-
gle for liberal democracy, which is demonstrated by the unanimity of respondents attitudes that their
governments suppress political discourse But the degree of use and dependence on these new media
instruments are not uniform across the region Gender and the level of education are two salient factors
that create these differences in the use of and dependency on new media technology for political com-
munication in East Africa
Chapter 7
Whose TV is it Anyway? An Examination of the Shift towards Satellite
Television in Zimbabwe 128
Rick Malleus, Seattle University, USA
The rise in popularity of satellite television in Zimbabwe was not mainly driven by the capabilities of
the new technology, but by dissatisfaction with Zimbabwe Television (ZTV) The chapter will begin
with a discussion that problematizes the idea of what constitutes new technology in the African and
Zimbabwean contexts The focus then moves to the content broadcast locally and how a segment of
the Zimbabwean population have turned away from ZTV to have their media needs and gratifications
met from satellite TV
Chapter 8
Wiring African Newsrooms: The Internet and Mainstream Print Journalism
Practice in Zimbabwe 144
Hayes Mawindi Mabweazara, University College Falmouth, UK
The deployment of the Internet by Zimbabwean journalists (and indeed in Africa at large) is relative
and contingent upon the internal newsroom context(s) and the wider socio-political and economic cir-
cumstances in which the journalists operate Among other functions, the technology shapes the main-
stream press news agenda as well as avails information often censored by government However, as the
chapter shall demonstrate, the use of the Internet is replete with ethical and professional implications
Section 2
Emerging Media, Language, Pop Culture, and Health Communication
Chapter 9
Textualizing the HIV/AIDS Motif in Theatre-Against-AIDS Performances in Kenya 164
Mahiri Mwita, Princeton University, USA
Using examples from performances of four theatre groups that operate in Nakuru and Mombasa towns
of Kenya, the chapter examines how the performances textualize, thematize, and theatise the main is-
sues in HIV/AIDS as seen through the perspective of the performers and how the targeted audience
reacts to these AIDS performances
Chapter 10
New Media and Health Communication: Communication Strategies in Malaria
Control in Nigeria 197
Nwachukwu Andrew Egbunike, University of Ibadan, Nigeria
The new media are gradually gaining ground as dependable channels that meet the communication
needs of young Nigerians in the fight against Malaria, a pandemic that kills more than 3,000 children
daily in Africa This chapter discusses how the potential associated with the Internet and social net-
works can be incorporated in the campaign for the Insecticide Treated Nets (ITNs) among the Nigerian
youth
Chapter 11
Translanguaging and Negotiation of Ethnicity: Reproduction of Hegemonic Structures in
Communication Media 213
Peter Githinji, Ohio University, USA
New communication technologies have only succeeded in providing a new arena where the traditional
discourse is reproduced Standing at the intersection between these new technologies and communi-
cation is language—the medium that facilitates interpersonal interaction both in traditional modes of
interaction and in digital interactions We shall be examining how the linguistic practices interact with
these new communication technologies
Chapter 12
Veganporn com amp; Sistah: Explorations of Whiteness through Textual Linguistic
Cyberminstrelsy on the Internet 235
Amie Breeze Harper, University of California-Davis, USA
Covert whiteness (a tacit form of racialized consciousness) does not necessarily manifest itself at the
surface level in the same overt manner that extreme white cyber hate imagined communities do By
applying Critical Race Theory and Black Feminist methodology-based discursive analysis, Harper in-
vestigates performances of whiteness in a vegan/animal-rights-oriented website called Veganporn com
Chapter 13
Language and Performing Arts: East African Hip Hop and Public Sensitization for
Political Change 256
E Sangai Mohochi, Maseno University, Kenya
D Ndirangu Wachanga, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, USA
The youth, specifically, exhibit a higher urge to change the local by borrowing more and more from the
global They copy music styles, themes, dance styles, as well as dressing codes of popular western mu-
sicians and their language forms In that context, this paper aims at meeting two goals First, to analyze
the extent to which youthful musicians have managed to maintain a balance between educating and en-
tertaining society at the local level, while keeping abreast with emerging global trends and influences
Section 3
Emerging Media, Global Politics, and Cultural Transformation
Chapter 14
Mediating Identity and Culture: Nigerian Videos and African Immigrants in the U S 273
Adedayo Ladigbolu Abah, Washington and Lee University, USA
Using a combined method of surveying and personal interviews, several African immigrants, their chil-
dren, and friends living in the Dallas/Fort Worth area of Texas, USA were interviewed for their views
on the role of the nascent Nigerian video industry in the way they sustain and straddle their multiple
identities and culture in their society of settlement Results indicate that most of the immigrants view
the videos as affirmation of the values they grew up with and with which they still identify
Chapter 15
The Role of Mass Mediated Messages and Cultural Identity with Cross-Cultural
Communication Failures Resulting from Flawed U S Military Policy in Iraq 294
Jim Schnell, Ohio Dominican University, USA
This chapter addresses mass media and cultural identity dynamics that impact U S military policy in
the execution of the Iraq war and related cross-cultural communication issues that have evolved dur-
ing the course of the war The inability to consider, let alone plan for, cross-cultural ramifications has
been a central communication failure that has proven tremendously problematic The mass media, via
traditional channels and new communication technologies, have been keen to report on these matters
which, in turn, thave modified public understanding of the matters being reported
Chapter 16
New Media and Hegemonic Discourse in Pakistan 304
Saman Talib, Beaconhouse National University, Pakistan
Sadia Gardezi, Lahore School of Economics, Pakistan
The effects of the new media may not be what we expect with respect to the democratization of
society The analysis in this chapter shows that ideological hegemony is not only alive and well, but
might even thrive in these new media To scrutinize these effects, the chapter focuses on the impact of
Pakistani cable television on identity and culture discourse through the lens of three topics: identity and
the new communication technologies; ideology, power and the new media; and new media and new
popular cultures
Chapter 17
The World Narrow Web: Internet Content Regulation in South Korea 320
Siho Nam, University of North Florida, USA
The inauguration of the Lee Myung-Bak administration in 2008 signaled a crisis for Internet-driven
participatory, democratic public culture in South Korea One of the most visible effects was immedi-
ately found in the administration s repressive media policy A series of anti-democratic regulations,
grounded in both conservative and neo-liberal philosophies, was implemented to control and tame
civic participation, public deliberation, and identity politics on the Internet Firstly, in light of this, this
chapter summarizes certain main debates regarding the role of the Internet in promoting or hindering
democracy
Chapter 18
An Agent for Change: The Internet is Setting New Agendas in China 337
Jiafei Yin, Central Michigan University, USA
This chapter investigates the social conditions and ways in which new communication technologies
are transforming the politics, culture, and the society in China through analyses of uses of the Internet,
different roles played by the traditional and the new media, cases that were catapulted to the national
media spotlight by the online community, government laws and regulations responding to the devel-
opment of the Internet, and through contrasts with the roles new communication technologies play in
western and African societies
Compilation of References 359
About the Contributors 391
Index 397
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
geographic | Afrika Afrika (DE-588)4000695-5 gnd |
geographic_facet | Afrika |
id | DE-604.BV039155061 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T00:00:11Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781609605919 |
language | English |
lccn | 2011001308 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-024172734 |
oclc_num | 745519915 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-703 DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-703 DE-11 |
physical | XXVIII, 399 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2011 |
publishDateSearch | 2011 |
publishDateSort | 2011 |
publisher | Information Science Reference |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Premier reference source |
spelling | Cultural identity and new communication technologies political, ethnic and ideological implications D. Ndirangu Wachanga [ed.] Hershey, Pa. Information Science Reference 2011 XXVIII, 399 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Premier reference source "This book presents a careful blend of conceptual, theoretical and applied research in new communication technologies,examining content that places new communication technologies in a context that recognizes their seamless integration into the designs of politics and culture"--Provided by publisher. Gesellschaft Politik Information technology Social aspects Africa Information technology Political aspects Africa Telecommunication Social aspects Africa Telecommunication Political aspects Africa Informationstechnik (DE-588)4026926-7 gnd rswk-swf Politischer Wandel (DE-588)4175047-0 gnd rswk-swf Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 gnd rswk-swf Neue Medien (DE-588)4196910-8 gnd rswk-swf Afrika Afrika (DE-588)4000695-5 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Afrika (DE-588)4000695-5 g Informationstechnik (DE-588)4026926-7 s Neue Medien (DE-588)4196910-8 s Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 s Politischer Wandel (DE-588)4175047-0 s DE-604 Wachanga, D. Ndirangu 1975- Sonstige (DE-588)1014328403 oth Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-60960-592-6 HEBIS Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024172734&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Cultural identity and new communication technologies political, ethnic and ideological implications Gesellschaft Politik Information technology Social aspects Africa Information technology Political aspects Africa Telecommunication Social aspects Africa Telecommunication Political aspects Africa Informationstechnik (DE-588)4026926-7 gnd Politischer Wandel (DE-588)4175047-0 gnd Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 gnd Neue Medien (DE-588)4196910-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4026926-7 (DE-588)4175047-0 (DE-588)4077587-2 (DE-588)4196910-8 (DE-588)4000695-5 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Cultural identity and new communication technologies political, ethnic and ideological implications |
title_auth | Cultural identity and new communication technologies political, ethnic and ideological implications |
title_exact_search | Cultural identity and new communication technologies political, ethnic and ideological implications |
title_full | Cultural identity and new communication technologies political, ethnic and ideological implications D. Ndirangu Wachanga [ed.] |
title_fullStr | Cultural identity and new communication technologies political, ethnic and ideological implications D. Ndirangu Wachanga [ed.] |
title_full_unstemmed | Cultural identity and new communication technologies political, ethnic and ideological implications D. Ndirangu Wachanga [ed.] |
title_short | Cultural identity and new communication technologies |
title_sort | cultural identity and new communication technologies political ethnic and ideological implications |
title_sub | political, ethnic and ideological implications |
topic | Gesellschaft Politik Information technology Social aspects Africa Information technology Political aspects Africa Telecommunication Social aspects Africa Telecommunication Political aspects Africa Informationstechnik (DE-588)4026926-7 gnd Politischer Wandel (DE-588)4175047-0 gnd Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 gnd Neue Medien (DE-588)4196910-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Gesellschaft Politik Information technology Social aspects Africa Information technology Political aspects Africa Telecommunication Social aspects Africa Telecommunication Political aspects Africa Informationstechnik Politischer Wandel Sozialer Wandel Neue Medien Afrika Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024172734&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT wachangadndirangu culturalidentityandnewcommunicationtechnologiespoliticalethnicandideologicalimplications |