Full Description
Media, Culture and Decolonization: Re-righting the Subaltern Histories of Ghana invites us to look at media and culture from a decolonial perspective. Through Dagbaŋ epistemologies and knowledge systems, this book examines media by highlighting how African languages, cultures and traditions can shift how we think of knowledge. It is an offering to anyone curious about the relationship between culture, language and media. By focusing on African language media in Ghana such as film, television and radio, the book emphasizes the importance of espousing a decolonial politic and praxis in the process of co-creating knowledge with indigenous communities. It connects the struggles of global majority countries and demonstrates the ways in which (neo)colonialism and imperialism impede the work toward liberatory futures. This book demonstrates the potential that African language media hold as tools of cultural and epistemological decolonization.
Contents
Introduction: Decolonizing African Media Studies
1 Bilchiinsi Philosophy, Media and Global Indigenous Epistemologies
2 Technology, Literacy and Media Development in Northern Ghana
3 Subalterns, Griots and Media
4 African Cinemas, Globalization and Resistance
5 Movie Distribution, Urban Architecture and the Newsification of Movies
6 Television for Social Change
Conclusion: Resisting Cultural Imperialism
Acknowledgments
Index