Re-examining the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe: Towards developmental communication and language empowerment

The imperative for indigenous language media in post-independent Africa has been widely researched and underscored. Although the use of indigenous languages is celebrated and considered to enhance the communicative and informative purposes of the media, a ubiquitous and relentless concern remains re...

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Main Authors: Mpofu, Phillip, Salawu, Abiodun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis Ltd. 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02572117.2018.1518036
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4454
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author Mpofu, Phillip
Salawu, Abiodun
author_facet Mpofu, Phillip
Salawu, Abiodun
author_sort Mpofu, Phillip
collection DSpace
description The imperative for indigenous language media in post-independent Africa has been widely researched and underscored. Although the use of indigenous languages is celebrated and considered to enhance the communicative and informative purposes of the media, a ubiquitous and relentless concern remains regarding the low status, marginalisation and exclusion of indigenous languages in African media systems. Focusing on the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe, Kwayedza and uMthunywa, we question the significance of their ostentatious news headlines against the dominant scholarly arguments for indigenous language media in Africa. Juxtaposing Kwayedza and uMthunywa alongside mainstream English newspapers, The Herald and The Chronicle, we interrogate the framing of news headlines and the prominent themes reported on. This article is framed around the concepts of language development, linguistic decolonisation and communication for development. The article exposes the nuances of marginalisation of indigenous languages and the exclusion of indigenous language press readers from nationally significant political and socio-economic development issues. We advance the argument that the indigenous language press in particular and the media in general must engage in people-centred communication, that is, communication that inspires and details local people’s needs and ambitions, and also foregrounds contemporary and broader political and socio-economic development matters affecting the nation.
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spelling ir-11408-44542022-06-27T13:49:06Z Re-examining the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe: Towards developmental communication and language empowerment Mpofu, Phillip Salawu, Abiodun indigenous language press developmental communication language empowerment Zimbabwe The imperative for indigenous language media in post-independent Africa has been widely researched and underscored. Although the use of indigenous languages is celebrated and considered to enhance the communicative and informative purposes of the media, a ubiquitous and relentless concern remains regarding the low status, marginalisation and exclusion of indigenous languages in African media systems. Focusing on the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe, Kwayedza and uMthunywa, we question the significance of their ostentatious news headlines against the dominant scholarly arguments for indigenous language media in Africa. Juxtaposing Kwayedza and uMthunywa alongside mainstream English newspapers, The Herald and The Chronicle, we interrogate the framing of news headlines and the prominent themes reported on. This article is framed around the concepts of language development, linguistic decolonisation and communication for development. The article exposes the nuances of marginalisation of indigenous languages and the exclusion of indigenous language press readers from nationally significant political and socio-economic development issues. We advance the argument that the indigenous language press in particular and the media in general must engage in people-centred communication, that is, communication that inspires and details local people’s needs and ambitions, and also foregrounds contemporary and broader political and socio-economic development matters affecting the nation. 2021-06-10T11:42:21Z 2021-06-10T11:42:21Z 2018 Article 257-2117 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02572117.2018.1518036 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4454 en South African Journal of African Languages;Vol.38 ; Iss. 3 open Taylor and Francis Ltd.
spellingShingle indigenous language press
developmental communication
language empowerment
Zimbabwe
Mpofu, Phillip
Salawu, Abiodun
Re-examining the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe: Towards developmental communication and language empowerment
title Re-examining the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe: Towards developmental communication and language empowerment
title_full Re-examining the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe: Towards developmental communication and language empowerment
title_fullStr Re-examining the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe: Towards developmental communication and language empowerment
title_full_unstemmed Re-examining the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe: Towards developmental communication and language empowerment
title_short Re-examining the indigenous language press in Zimbabwe: Towards developmental communication and language empowerment
title_sort re-examining the indigenous language press in zimbabwe: towards developmental communication and language empowerment
topic indigenous language press
developmental communication
language empowerment
Zimbabwe
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02572117.2018.1518036
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4454
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