网络新闻媒体、宗教认同及其对性别政治的影响:马拉维2014年选举的观察

A. Gunde
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引用次数: 2

摘要

互联网的兴起为新闻媒体提供了以许多重要方式与受众沟通的机会,这可能对塑造公众舆论和改变全球范围内的生活产生深远的影响。通过批判性话语分析(CDA),本文探讨了在线新闻媒体如何通过宣传父权宗教信仰来强化性别刻板印象,以及这对发展中民主国家中妇女在政治领导角色方面的赋权可能产生的巨大影响。该分析来自2014年马拉维选举,当时一个主要反对党使用了一个充满性别歧视的宗教和文化内涵的竞选口号,嘲笑并投票推翻了南部非洲第一位女总统乔伊斯·班达和她的人民党。这篇文章反映了新媒体巩固根深蒂固的宗教和文化信仰的潜力,这些信仰使妇女在领导职位上被边缘化,这可能对减少性别不平等产生巨大影响,特别是在发展中民主国家的政治代表中。把乔伊斯扫走。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Online News Media, Religious Identity and Their Influence on Gendered Politics: Observations from Malawi's 2014 Elections
The rise of the internet has offered the opportunity for the news media to communicate with audiences in many significant ways that may have profound consequences in the shaping of public opinion and transforming lives in the global sphere. Through a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA), this article examines ways in which online news media could be used to reinforce gender stereotypes by promoting patriarchal religious beliefs and how this may have huge implications on women empowerment with regard to political leadership roles in developing democracies. The analysis is drawn from 2014 Malawi elections in which a major opposition party used a campaign slogan peppered with sexist religious and cultural connotations to ridicule and vote out of office southern Africa’s first ever female President – Joyce Banda and her People Party (PP). In May 2014, Malawi held national elections and the main contestants were former President Banda representing the PP, Peter Mutharika of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), Lazarus Chakwera of the Malawi Congress Party (MCP) and Atupele Muluzi of the United Democratic Front (UDF). Mutharika and the DPP won the elections to wrestle away the presidency from Banda and her People’s Party. This article discusses the campaign slogan – Sesa Joyce Sesa [1] – created by the DPP to attack former President Banda in which Malawi’s significant online news media sites played a critical role in the diffusion of the gendered campaign mantra to resonate with the religious identity of majority the electorate. The article reflects on the potential of new media to consolidate deep-rooted religious and cultural beliefs that marginalise women for leadership positions and how that may have a huge bearing on abridging gender inequalities particularly in political representation of developing democracies. [1] Sweep Joyce away.
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