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Human Rights and African Airwaves
Harri Englund
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Description for Human Rights and African Airwaves
Paperback. Details local discourse in the global discussion of human rights Num Pages: 280 pages, 9 b&w illustrations. BIC Classification: 1HFMM; APW; JFD; JPVH. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 230 x 153 x 23. Weight in Grams: 468.
Human Rights and African Airwaves focuses on Nkhani Zam'maboma, a popular Chichewa news bulletin broadcast on Malawi's public radio. The program often takes authorities to task and questions much of the human rights rhetoric that comes from international organizations. Highlighting obligation and mutual dependence, the program expresses, in popular idioms and local narrative forms, grievances and injustices that are closest to Malawi's impoverished public. Harri Englund reveals broadcasters' everyday struggles with state-sponsored biases and a listening public with strong views and a critical ear. This fresh look at African-language media shows how Africans effectively confront inequality, exploitation, and poverty.
Product Details
Publisher
Indiana University Press United States
Place of Publication
Bloomington, IN, United States
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
About Harri Englund
Harri Englund is Reader in Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge. He is author of Prisoners of Freedom: Human Rights and the African Poor, winner of the 2006 Amaury Talbot Prize of the Royal Anthropological Institute.
Reviews for Human Rights and African Airwaves
A valuable addition to any collection on human rights or media studies. . . . Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
Choice
This book will certainly inspire anthropologists working on popular culture. And, because of its thorough theoretical discussions and claims, the monograph will help us not only to disentangle the complexity of Africa's public culture, but it ... Read morewill push us to reflect on methodological and epistemological traditions within the discipline.
Research in African Literatures
Englund offers a richly textured, descriptive account of knowledge production on air. Although the main aim of Englund's book is to add to ongoing debates on liberalism and human rights, it offers a number of other important contributions to both media anthropology and MCCS. The book's focus on an African language medium . . . , its detailed analysis of both the media production and consumption process . . . and its descriptive rather than normative method result in a fresh approach to media and communication in Africa, an approach that will hopefully provoke similarly oriented studies in the near future.
Journal of Southern African Studies
Harri Englund's [title] is a humble yet potent book, one that does not proclaim its intentions but allows them to seep into you gradually and indirectly. The slow progression of this book is the result of Englund's laudable strategy to derive the theoretical significance of his arguments from the particulars of his ethnography . . . .August 2013
American Ethnologist
Harri Englund's latest book is a challenging synthesis of theory and ethnography . . . Anyone interested in African media and politics . . . will want to read this serious work for the originality both of its case study of a single long-running programme, and of its construction through a variety of questions . . . .August 2013
Africa
[E]thnographic analysis of radio is relatively underrepresented in the anthropology of media as well as in anthropology of human rights. Englund's book is a welcome addition to both of these growing fields, and will be of use to any critics of liberalism.Nov. 2014
PoLAR
Harri Englund reveals broadcasters' everyday struggles with state-sponsored biases and a listening public with strong views and a critical ear. This fresh look at African-language media shows how Africans effectively confront inequality, exploitation, and poverty.Feb. 2014
Allegra
All will find in this book, much that is familiar but set in new contexts, some to dispute or qualify, but considerable to generate conversation and enhance understanding. It is a thoughtful and fascinating work that urges us to be aware of different media, their reception and uses, and the myriad ways in which they speak to and about our worlds.
Intl. Journal African Historical Studies
Scholars interested in internationalizing media and journalism history will find this book a challenging provocation as Englund makes a compelling case for the need for more studies of media production and reception in the global South . . . April 2013
Jhistory
Human rights and African Airwaves is a must read for students and scholars of Africa, human rights, and media studies. . . . At its best, the book is a fierce, grounded commentary—through the lens of a radio program—of the rich imaginations, powerful insights, and wry critiques of everyday Malawians as they try to live their lives as moral beings in the face of poverty, corruption, and injustice. The author's intellectual rigor and analysis provide strong support for his arguments, which may be contentious to some but demonstrate the value of anthropological methods in investigating society. . . . A valuable addition to any collection on human rights or media studies. . . . Highly recommended.
Journal of African History
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