The alternative press in Namibia, 1960-1990

The study seeks to document the development of the alternative press in Namibia from 1960 to 1990. It traces the reasons for its emergence and outlines the stated aims and objectives in order to illustrate its attempts to nurture a culture - of colonial resistance. It is argued that structural facto...

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Main Author: Heuva, William Edward
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002888
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-34342018-09-18T04:22:51ZThe alternative press in Namibia, 1960-1990Heuva, William EdwardPress -- NamibiaPress and politics -- NamibiaNamibia -- NewspapersThe study seeks to document the development of the alternative press in Namibia from 1960 to 1990. It traces the reasons for its emergence and outlines the stated aims and objectives in order to illustrate its attempts to nurture a culture - of colonial resistance. It is argued that structural factors such as funding, distribution, advertisements and ownership enabled the alternative press to operate outside the South African apartheid hegemony. The study explains how the intellectuals used the alternative press in their attempts to mobilise and organise colonised Namibians for social change. They did this by formulating and disseminating ideologically constructed discourses (messages) which challenged the colonial discourse. These messages were produced and directed towards a specific audience, the masses to whom the intellectuals were organically linked. Their primary news definers were also drawn from the ranks of these masses. It is further argued that the alternative press came to represent the colonised masses by voicing their needs and aspirations which were marginalised by the mainstream colonial media. Finally, a relatively detailed analysis of the content, the language used and the'messages carried by the alternative press has been made to demonstrate its political agenda, which was to empower the masses to achieve their objective - the attainment of political independence. These issues are analyzed against a background of theoretical frameworks which seek to explain how subordinated groups and classes in a state of domination sought to establish alternative channels of communication in the creation of a counter hegemonic order.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Humanities, Journalism and Media Studies1996ThesisMastersMA273 leavespdfvital:3434http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002888EnglishHeuva, William Edward
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Press -- Namibia
Press and politics -- Namibia
Namibia -- Newspapers
spellingShingle Press -- Namibia
Press and politics -- Namibia
Namibia -- Newspapers
Heuva, William Edward
The alternative press in Namibia, 1960-1990
description The study seeks to document the development of the alternative press in Namibia from 1960 to 1990. It traces the reasons for its emergence and outlines the stated aims and objectives in order to illustrate its attempts to nurture a culture - of colonial resistance. It is argued that structural factors such as funding, distribution, advertisements and ownership enabled the alternative press to operate outside the South African apartheid hegemony. The study explains how the intellectuals used the alternative press in their attempts to mobilise and organise colonised Namibians for social change. They did this by formulating and disseminating ideologically constructed discourses (messages) which challenged the colonial discourse. These messages were produced and directed towards a specific audience, the masses to whom the intellectuals were organically linked. Their primary news definers were also drawn from the ranks of these masses. It is further argued that the alternative press came to represent the colonised masses by voicing their needs and aspirations which were marginalised by the mainstream colonial media. Finally, a relatively detailed analysis of the content, the language used and the'messages carried by the alternative press has been made to demonstrate its political agenda, which was to empower the masses to achieve their objective - the attainment of political independence. These issues are analyzed against a background of theoretical frameworks which seek to explain how subordinated groups and classes in a state of domination sought to establish alternative channels of communication in the creation of a counter hegemonic order.
author Heuva, William Edward
author_facet Heuva, William Edward
author_sort Heuva, William Edward
title The alternative press in Namibia, 1960-1990
title_short The alternative press in Namibia, 1960-1990
title_full The alternative press in Namibia, 1960-1990
title_fullStr The alternative press in Namibia, 1960-1990
title_full_unstemmed The alternative press in Namibia, 1960-1990
title_sort alternative press in namibia, 1960-1990
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 1996
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002888
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