Bibliographische Detailangaben
Beteiligte: Ogenga, Fredrick (VerfasserIn)
veröffentlicht: 2010
Teil von: , Erschienen in: Global Media Journal: Afrcan Edition, volume 4/2010, number 2, pp. 151 - 162. [ISSN: 2073-2740]
Medientyp: Artikel, E-Artikel

Get it

Diese Ressource ist frei verfügbar.
weitere Informationen
Beschreibung: freier Zugang
Umfang: 12 p.
Sprache: Englisch
Teil von: , Erschienen in: Global Media Journal: Afrcan Edition, volume 4/2010, number 2, pp. 151 - 162. [ISSN: 2073-2740]
Schlagwörter:
Kollektion: Datenbank Internetquellen
Inhaltsangabe

"This paper utilises Hall’s (1977) ‘encoding-decoding’ theory in the context of critical political economy theories of the media and cultural studies to explain the political, economic and cultural factors that influence media operation and content both at a macro and micro level. While political economy provides the setting in which the Kenyan media operates, cultural studies show how media content is not only shaped by the political and economic environments comprising those in power positions. Audiences are also actively engaged in the process of meaning construction. Considering Hall’s (1977) encoding-decoding theory, the audiences can reject, negotiate or accept media content based on their own value systems and cultural orientation. Meaning, therefore, becomes a product of continual struggle between different discourses and power cannot be located in a top down manner as to who influences meaning as seen in a propaganda model. This is due to the fact that texts are diffused in different locations in society. The 2008 Kenya Communication Bill is utilised as an example to trace briefly the political and historical developments of policy issues that have influenced the Kenyan media. The Bill, furthermore, indicates how a weak socio-economic, olitical and cultural environment is marred by ineffectual policies meant to safeguard and guarantee the freedom of the press as an extension of individual freedom of expression as enshrined in the Kenyan constitution. This weak policy context has ensured the Kenyan media remains subject to easy political manipulation and control. However, the paper concludes by showing how citizen journalism is growing out of a regulated mainstream media through internet technology.[Information des Anbieters]

Abstract; key words; introduction; the media in liberal democracies; political economy of the media; what do such kinds of media representations mean to the Kenyan audience?; contesting the media in Kenya; Policy setbacks; what is contentious about this Bill?; so, what next?; about the author; references;