{"title":"揭秘历史,揭秘腐败,揭秘媒体分析:一些关于南非媒体的新书","authors":"K. Tomaselli","doi":"10.1080/02500167.2021.1895241","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract This article is an extended review essay that maps recent titles written by practising journalists and journalists turned academics in South Africa. The analysis focuses on Gawie Botma’s Race Talk in the South African Media; Lizette Rabe’s A Luta Continua: A History of Media Freedom in South Africa; Glenda Daniels’ Power and Loss in South African Journalism: News in the Age of Social Media; and Anton Harber’s So, for the Record – behind the Headlines in an Era of State Capture. These studies follow earlier analyses, namely: Herman Wasserman’s Media, Geopolitics and Power: A View from the Global South; and Sean Jacobs’ Media in Postapartheid South Africa: Postcolonial Politics in the Age of Globalization. An intersecting track is the journalists’ exposés, such as: Paper Tiger: Iqbal Survé and the Downfall of Independent Newspapers by Alide Dasnois and Chris Whitfield; SABC 1936–1995: Still a Key Player … or an Endangered Species? by Wynand Harmse; The SABC 8 by Foeta Krige; and Behind the Scenes at Gupta TV by Rajesh Sundaram. How each study frames history, the researcher/s’ position and their respective writing styles are discussed. The author argues that academic studies should be read in concert with works written by journalists because abstract frames of reference tend to bracket out the daily nitty-gritty struggles within newsrooms, especially within the current conjecture. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
这篇文章是一篇扩展的评论文章,描绘了最近由南非执业记者和记者转为学者撰写的标题。本文着重分析了南非媒体中的高维·博特马的种族言论;莉莎特·拉贝的《持续的道路》:南非媒体自由史格伦达·丹尼尔斯在南非新闻中的权力与失落:社交媒体时代的新闻以及安东·哈伯的《So, for the Record——在国家俘获时代的头条背后》。这些研究遵循了先前的分析,即:赫尔曼·沃瑟曼的《媒体、地缘政治和权力:来自全球南方的观点》;肖恩·雅各布斯的《后种族隔离时代的南非媒体:全球化时代的后殖民政治》。一个交叉的轨迹是记者的揭露,例如:纸老虎:伊克巴尔的调查和独立报纸的垮台,由Alide Dasnois和Chris Whitfield;SABC 1936-1995:仍然是关键角色……还是濒临灭绝的物种?威纳德·哈姆斯;Foeta Krige的SABC 8;以及Rajesh Sundaram在Gupta TV的幕后。讨论了每个研究如何构建历史,研究人员的立场和他们各自的写作风格。作者认为,学术研究应该与记者写的作品一起阅读,因为抽象的参考框架往往会忽略新闻编辑室里的日常细节斗争,尤其是在当前的猜测中。最后,作者提出,无论所谓的“主流媒体”的缺陷是什么,在最近出版的大量关于国家和私营部门腐败的书籍中,个别记者(和其他人)都是讲述故事背后的故事的人。
Unpacking History, Unpacking Corruption, and Unpacking Media Analysis: Some Recent Books on the South African Media
Abstract This article is an extended review essay that maps recent titles written by practising journalists and journalists turned academics in South Africa. The analysis focuses on Gawie Botma’s Race Talk in the South African Media; Lizette Rabe’s A Luta Continua: A History of Media Freedom in South Africa; Glenda Daniels’ Power and Loss in South African Journalism: News in the Age of Social Media; and Anton Harber’s So, for the Record – behind the Headlines in an Era of State Capture. These studies follow earlier analyses, namely: Herman Wasserman’s Media, Geopolitics and Power: A View from the Global South; and Sean Jacobs’ Media in Postapartheid South Africa: Postcolonial Politics in the Age of Globalization. An intersecting track is the journalists’ exposés, such as: Paper Tiger: Iqbal Survé and the Downfall of Independent Newspapers by Alide Dasnois and Chris Whitfield; SABC 1936–1995: Still a Key Player … or an Endangered Species? by Wynand Harmse; The SABC 8 by Foeta Krige; and Behind the Scenes at Gupta TV by Rajesh Sundaram. How each study frames history, the researcher/s’ position and their respective writing styles are discussed. The author argues that academic studies should be read in concert with works written by journalists because abstract frames of reference tend to bracket out the daily nitty-gritty struggles within newsrooms, especially within the current conjecture. In conclusion, the author suggests that whatever the alleged flaws of the “mainstream media” may be, individual journalists (and others) are the ones telling the story behind the story in the slew of books that have been published recently on state and private sector corruption.