Reading Dina Ligaga’s Women, Visibility and Morality in Kenyan Popular Media from Tanzania

IF 0.9 2区 社会学 Q2 CULTURAL STUDIES
S. Omari
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Women, Visibility and Morality in Kenyan Popular Media examines constructions of femininity in Kenyan popular media and how these constructions engage with morality, sexuality and gender. The book focuses on narratives from three media: radio plays, tabloid newspapers, and social media. By using a Black feminist approach and cultural studies engagement with popular culture (13), Dina Ligaga critiques public constructions of femininity in Kenyan mediascapes (2). She argues that these constructions not only circulate stereotypical representations of femininity in Kenyan public culture, but also punitive measures taken against women for their transgression of behaviour, thus increasing violence against them. The book explores representations of a range of women (urban, politicians, educated, rich and low-income, married and unmarried) in Kenyan media, and their struggle for their wellbeing. Gender, feminist andmedia studies is a significant and burgeoning field of scholarship in Africa. For instance, some examples in Tanzania include Tanzanian women’s life histories (Ngaiza and Koda 1991), women/gender in education (Meena 1996; IDS 2011), gender inequalities (Mukangara and Koda 1997; TGNP Mtandao 2013), transformative feminism (Kitunga and Mbilinyi 2009), women in agriculture (Mbilinyi 2016), women in politics and management (Killian and Pastory 2018) and women and micro-credit (Mwaipopo and Dauda 2019). Studies on the representation of women in media and literary works in Tanzania include work by Swilla (2000), Omari (2008, 2019), Ekstrom (2010) and Lyimo (2014). Ligaga’s book has both divergences and parallels to those studies in Tanzania, as most of them have intended to analyse woman’s representation, marginalised position, and struggles in various sectors/media in order to address the situation. As a feminist researcher and a media scholar from East Africa, Ligaga has provided an interesting discussion on the topic. Unlike some previous studies on Kiswahili media, Ligaga’s book is wide-ranging in terms of the media outlets (newspapers, radio, and online social media such as Instagram) and groups of women examined. Basing her data on textual analysis of both (narratives and public scripts), Ligaga explores gender and sexuality as their representations circulate in Kenyan popular media. By writing this book, Ligaga wants us to understand the significance of and the role played by various agencies in representing and shaping women, including the state, publics, media practitioners and women themselves. Ligaga gives us a broad picture of the representation
从坦桑尼亚解读迪娜·利加的《肯尼亚大众媒体中的女性、能见度与道德》
肯尼亚大众媒体中的女性、可见度和道德考察了肯尼亚大众媒体中女性气质的建构,以及这些建构如何与道德、性和性别联系在一起。这本书主要关注三种媒体的叙述:广播剧、小报和社交媒体。通过使用黑人女权主义方法和参与流行文化的文化研究(13),Dina Ligaga批评了肯尼亚媒体对女性气质的公共建构(2)。她认为,这些建构不仅在肯尼亚公共文化中传播了女性气质的刻板印象,而且还对违反行为的女性采取了惩罚性措施,从而增加了对她们的暴力行为。这本书探讨了肯尼亚媒体中一系列女性(城市女性、政客女性、受过教育女性、富人女性、低收入女性、已婚女性和未婚女性)的表现,以及她们为自己的福祉所做的努力。性别、女权主义和媒体研究是非洲一个重要的新兴学术领域。例如,坦桑尼亚的一些例子包括坦桑尼亚妇女的生活史(Ngaiza和Koda, 1991年)、教育中的妇女/性别(Meena, 1996年;性别不平等(Mukangara和Koda, 1997;TGNP Mtandao 2013),变革女权主义(Kitunga和Mbilinyi 2009),农业妇女(Mbilinyi 2016),政治和管理妇女(Killian和Pastory 2018)以及妇女和小额信贷(Mwaipopo和Dauda 2019)。关于坦桑尼亚媒体和文学作品中女性代表性的研究包括Swilla(2000)、Omari(2008、2019)、Ekstrom(2010)和Lyimo(2014)的作品。Ligaga的书与坦桑尼亚的研究既有不同之处,也有相似之处,因为大多数研究都旨在分析女性的代表性、边缘化地位,以及在各个部门/媒体中的斗争,以解决这种情况。作为一名女权主义研究者和来自东非的媒体学者,Ligaga对这个话题进行了有趣的讨论。与之前对斯瓦希里语媒体的一些研究不同,Ligaga的书涵盖了媒体渠道(报纸、广播和Instagram等在线社交媒体)和调查的女性群体。Ligaga基于对这两者(叙事和公共剧本)的文本分析数据,探索了性别和性行为在肯尼亚大众媒体中的表现。通过写这本书,利加希望我们了解各种机构在代表和塑造女性方面的重要性和作用,包括国家、公众、媒体从业者和女性本身。利加给了我们一个大致的画面
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
10.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: The Journal of African Cultural Studies publishes leading scholarship on African culture from inside and outside Africa, with a special commitment to Africa-based authors and to African languages. Our editorial policy encourages an interdisciplinary approach, involving humanities, including environmental humanities. The journal focuses on dimensions of African culture, performance arts, visual arts, music, cinema, the role of the media, the relationship between culture and power, as well as issues within such fields as popular culture in Africa, sociolinguistic topics of cultural interest, and culture and gender. We welcome in particular articles that show evidence of understanding life on the ground, and that demonstrate local knowledge and linguistic competence. We do not publish articles that offer mostly textual analyses of cultural products like novels and films, nor articles that are mostly historical or those based primarily on secondary (such as digital and library) sources. The journal has evolved from the journal African Languages and Cultures, founded in 1988 in the Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London. From 2019, it is published in association with the International African Institute, London. Journal of African Cultural Studies publishes original research articles. The journal also publishes an occasional Contemporary Conversations section, in which authors respond to current issues. The section has included reviews, interviews and invited response or position papers. We welcome proposals for future Contemporary Conversations themes.
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