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Journal of African Media Studies 14.3 is out now!
Monday, November 14, 2022

Journal of African Media Studies 14.3 is out now!

Intellect is pleased to announce that Journal of African Media Studies 14.3 is out now!

 

For more information about the journal and issue click here>>

https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-african-media-studies

 

Aims & Scope

 

The Journal of African Media Studies (JAMS) is an interdisciplinary journal that provides a forum for debate on the historical and contemporary aspects of media and communication in Africa. It hereby aims to contribute to the ongoing re-positioning of media and cultural studies outside the Anglo-American axis. JAMS interprets media in a broad sense, incorporating not only formal media such as radio, television, print, internet and mobile telephony but also considers articles on ‘informal’, ‘small’ or ‘Indigenous’ media such as music, jokes and theatre. JAMS welcomes articles that discuss the relation of different media and forms of communication to the broader social, economic, historical and political context in Africa. JAMS has a preference for empirical work that is well grounded in theoretical debates and academic literature, and encourages contributors to include images, photographs or other graphics. JAMS also has a book and film review section and is published three times a year.

 

Issue 14.3

 

Editorial

 

Technology, language and media sociality in Africa

L. LUSIKE MUKHONGO

 

Articles

 

Racism and the post-apartheid media: Problematizing the racist Clicks advert as a manifestation of token transformation

PRINOLA GOVENDEN

 

Investigative journalism and anticorruption: Public perception on Anas’s approach in Ghana

GERSHON DAGBA, PRINCE OPOKU, MARK OPOKU AMANKWA AND ISRAEL NYABURI NYADERA

 

Borrowing lenses from the West: Analysis of an African media representation of western nations

VINCENT OBIA, ISMAIL A. IBRAHEEM AND CHARLES C. ONWUNALI

 

Towards media democracy: An examination of media policy reform activism and its impact on Zimbabwean media policy reform process

ALFANDIKA LAST AND UFUOMA AKPOJIVI

 

The Africa the media showed us: A visual content analysis of the 2014 Ebola epidemic

PHILLIP ARCENEAUX

 

Conspiracy theories, misinformation, disinformation and the coronavirus: A burgeoning of post-truth in the social media

MAJORITY OJI

 

Linguistic and communication exclusion in COVID-19 awareness campaigns in Malawi

PETER MAYESO JIYAJIYA AND ATIKONDA MTENJE-MKOCHI

 

Book Review

 

Chinese Media in Africa: Perception, Performance and Paradox, Emeka Umejei (2020)

YU XIANG