Abstract
The author examined the
current practices and trends in West African media. A case study
analysis of the main print and electronic media of Ghana and Nigeria
served as a focal point. The analysis was performed within the
context of present global telecommunications industries and their
corresponding transnational media corporations (TMCs). A general
historic overview that highlights main transitions of the
development of mass media in West Africa from colonial to post
colonial eras was included. The main print and electronic media of
Ghana and Nigeria was identified and the political, social and
cultural issues embedded in these media’s content were examined.
Further, the discussions of media forms and contents in West Africa
considered how the international press and electronic media interact
with the media of Ghana and Nigeria. Evolving media relationships
that emerged during the case study suggested a new era of global
communication controlled by TMCs affiliated with local government
officials and media industries whose primary interests are
commercial.
In this paper I will
examine current media practices and trends in West Africa via a case
study analysis of the media of Ghana and Nigeria. An observation of
the current media practices and trends in West Africa should
establish any analysis within the larger context of the operations
of global telecommunication industries and transnational media
corporations (TMCs) as they relate to the structure and content of
local media. The case study will briefly review historical media
relations in West Africa, refer to current literature on similar
studies, plus identify the main print and broadcast media of Ghana
and Nigeria. An exploration of the content of these media will
reflect on the significant political, social and cultural issues. In
addition, the analysis will consider how the international press and
electronic media interact with these states’ media, and
consequently, influence the international image of West Africa.
Evolving media relationships clarified during the case study suggest
a new era of global communication controlled by TMCs in league with
local government affiliates whose primary interests are commercial.
The majority of current
West African states were predominantly British and French colonies
until the late 1950s to early 1960s. Historically, colonization was
the condition of most georegions of Africa. Consequently, various
colonial authorities controlled the media development of the entire
continent according to their economic and political interests. The
earliest newspapers of 19th century West Africa circulating among
the indigenous populations began as religious publications published
by missionaries (Nyamnjoh, 2005). Religious participation helped to
create a politically passive population. In this way, these
publications served a useful function. Nigeria, a British colony,
developed the most diverse print media due to an urbanized trading
and commercial sector. Still, the majority of Nigeria’s early press
was targeted to British investors and colonists. France tended to
suppress development of an indigenous press in its colonies and
emphasized assimilation of the native populations to French culture.
A predominantly French press was considered an important part of the
assimilation process (Nyamnjoh, 2005). The British were more
tolerant of native cultural content in indigenous publications in
comparison, but certainly did not encourage a critical local press
with its own political agenda (Nyamnjoh, 2005).
Nevertheless, Nigeria
would develop such a press and play a significant part in West
Africa’s struggle for independence in the mid-20th
century (Nyamnjoh, 2005). Elite, Western-educated West Africans,
including Diaspora returning from North America and the West Indies,
began to publish claims for independence in the local media. British
and French colonial authorities branded these publications as
subversive in the "official" mass media of West Africa (Nyamnjoh,
2005). For example, British governors regarded Nnmandi Azikiwe’s
Nigerian newspaper as a plague that disrupted peaceful relations.
West African nationalists in Nigeria, however, developed an
articulate platform for independence and pride for African cultural
values in these publications that also served the leadership of
neighboring colonies seeking independence (Nyamnjoh, 2005). As
indigenous newspaper content grew more political in nature and
critical of colonization, nearly all territories ratified strict
laws that restricted the right of Africans to publish and distribute
newspapers. In addition, economic regulations were imposed that made
it very difficult for Africans to import newsprint and other
technological and/or structural necessities for building an
indigenous mass media that challenged the rule of major colonial
powers. West African populations most often depended on media
published by colonial powers and intended for the colonists to glean
information about international events (Nyamnjoh, 2005).
Historically, there was a
difference of perspective among the African elites and their
colonizers. The African elites understood they were asserting their
independence within their native continent. The colonizers, mostly
Western European elites, perceived the assertions of autonomy by
indigenous populations as seditious, violent, primitive, and
generally in opposition to their economic and political interests
within Africa. Their economic interests were in sources of low-wage
labor and natural resources that could be extracted inexpensively.
Their political interests were in the continued subjugation of the
colonial populations. British and French print media of that time
projected this particular image of West African native populations
to a wider world audience (Nyamnjoh, 2005). Moreover, it is ironic
that after independence and the international recognition of
African states, most of the former colonial powers eventually
imposed international trade regulations and other economic measures
on independent African states that now make it very difficult to
refrain from importing Western European content plus structural
and technological necessities that tend to dominate current West
African media, e.g. WTO "free flow of information" policy. Either
way, the US and/or Western Europe’s intent to control key aspects of
African mass media to more easily meet their economic and political
interests in the continent is historically evident.
West African masses
adapted to the restricted media conditions imposed by colonial
authorities by going underground with the press and augmenting
liberation communication with pamphlets, tracts, clandestine radio
and oral networks ripe with political rumor, humor, parody, and
derision known as radio trottoir (Campbell, 1998; Nyamnjoh,
2005). For instance, when reports of national policy appear in the
official press, they are immediately parodied on the streets.
Radio trottoir is a highly effective means of relaying accurate
accounts of important events within an atmosphere of selective
information (Campbell, 1998). These types of oppositions to the
official press that began in West Africa in the 1970s and 80s
continue today, albeit in forms and rhetorical content unique to
present communication technology and issues as discussed later in
this paper.
The above forms of
indigenous media supplemented the restricted press of colonial era
West Africa allowing local populations to develop an alternative
discourse of independence (Nyamnjoh, 2005). However, when
independence began to be realized among West African colonies the
new governments consisting of the leadership of the independence
movement, i.e. the West African elites mentioned previously,
followed the lead of colonial authorities and maintained a
restricted press (Campbell, 1998; Nyamnjoh, 2005). The governments
of the new states understood firsthand the power of the media to
propagate a particular political perspective and motivate the masses
to act on that perspective (Nyamnjoh, 2005). States used the media
as a tool for national development; following that era’s U.S. and
other Western European nations’ leadership in regard to the role of
the media in developing countries. The U.S. and former colonial
powers still played an important economic role within the newly
sovereign West African nations dependent on Western technological
and industrial resources. The press, then, became one means of
attempting to keep civil society in check, i.e. developing according
to Western expectations of a stable geo-region for investment (Nyamnjoh,
2005).
Similarly, broadcasting in
West Africa was first controlled by Western colonial powers.
Indigenous populations were denied the right to choose the type of
broadcast system as well as the right to determine access and use of
the system (Nyamnjoh, 2005; Thussu, 2000). While broadcasting a
rhetoric of democratic pluralism and freedom of information in West
Africa via radio broadcasts by Voice of America or the BBC,
especially during the Cold War era, the colonial powers forcefully
repressed the nationalist independence movement spreading throughout
all African colonies in the mid to late 1950s (Nyamnjoh, 2005;
Thussu, 2000). Yet, when independence was granted to West African
colonies, the new governments centralized broadcasting in order to
maintain rigid state control over this medium as well. Babatunde
Jose, a prominent Nigerian publisher, claimed that the post-colonial
press in West Africa had relatively less freedom to publish than
during the colonial eras (Campbell, 1998). Alternatives to media
oppression were now possible, but the governments of postcolonial
West Africa preferred to retain an inherited, limiting model of
broadcasting until forced to adapt this model to the demands of
international broadcast reforms, i.e. deregulation and privatization
that began in the 1980s and 90s (Nyamnjoh, 2005). Since then, West
Africa’s media, and international media in general, have gradually
conformed to the demands of the WTO and international
telecommunications regulatory organizations such as the ITU (Nyamnjoh,
2005; Thussu, 2000). The demands of these supra-governmental
organizations are designed to allow TMCs to minimize the
profit-limiting affects of national borders and the local
regulations/customs that characterize these geo-regions, creating
unique production and communication conditions that did not exist
historically (Thussu, 2000).
The outcomes of the
historical processes briefly explained here are evident in the
current media of Ghana and Nigeria, which will become apparent in
the discussions that follow. According to present scholarly
literature, (e.g. Crabtree and Malhotra, 2003; Eko, 2003; Nuviadenu,
2005; Nyamnjoh, 2005; Thussu, 2000) these developmental changes
reflect a new era of global communication controlled by TMCs in
league with local government affiliates whose primary interests are
commercial, i.e. the expansion of consumer, commodity and service
markets and, ultimately, profits. From here, the case study
identifies the main broadcast and print media of Ghana and Nigeria
and examines the content in an attempt to explore the political,
social and cultural issues evident within this new era of global
communication, including how these issues are framed by local and
global media.
Although the governments
of Ghana and Nigeria have ratified new constitutions during a global
wave of deregulation and privatization in the 1990s that relaxed
many restrictions on the press and broadcasting, (Heath, 2001) there
remains a fair amount of rigid media regulation within these states
(Nyamnjoh, 2005) plus an indirect influence from international media
regulations without due to TMCs and the global telecommunications
industries (Heath, 2001; Thussu, 2004). For example, The National
Broadcast Commission (NBC) briefly shut down Freedom Radio, a
privately owned radio station in Kano, Nigeria on March 28, 2006 for
an alleged violation of the Nigerian Broadcast Code. Further, the
NBC ordered the station to pay the equivalent of $1,600 US dollars
within 48 hours for failing to comply with the Nigerian Broadcasting
Code’s political broadcast regulations. Apparently, guests and
callers on Freedom Radio’s talk show programs were making comments
that could possibly disrupt peaceful—or at least
uncontested—political relations in the region. The station received
written permission from the NBC to resume broadcasting on April 21,
2006, but the station’s executive director, Farouk Dalhatu, stated
that the NBC did not indicate any conditions for future operations (MRA/IFEX,
2006).
In terms of main print
media, the Nigerian Tribune is the oldest privately owned
newspaper in Nigeria originally published in 1949 by Nigerian
nationalist Chief Obafemi Awolowo (Nigerian Tribune, 2006). This
seasoned newspaper’s motto is "Truth, Courage and Fairness" and it
claims to cater to the interests of the common people. The
historical blurb about this newspaper highlights its struggle to
remain in circulation despite colonial regulations and, later, civil
war (Nigerian Tribune, 2006). Like other Nigerian main newspapers
the Nigerian Tribune has an online version, its website
appearing professional, but not flashy, reflecting its history as an
established daily publication. In contrast, ThisDay online
seems to better represent the cutting edge of today’s Nigerian
press. ThisDay’s website has an interactive modern generic,
or current Western style news format, that invites readers to join
its cyber community where people can read and/or submit news
articles, watch headlines and stock market prices scroll by,
maintain an onsite journal and read other journal entries, check out
real estate listings, find out the latest entertainment in the
region, send and receive email, etc. (ThisDay, 2006). This
newspaper’s image/format resembles USA Today, for example,
and claims a readership of 4 billion (ThisDay, 2006). It is the
flagship newspaper of Leaders & Company Limited, a publishing
business established in 1995. The editor-in-chief of ThisDay
and chairman of Leaders & Company Limited is Nduka Obaigbena, a
Western educated Nigerian, and former employee of Newsweek
magazine who has served as a keynote speaker at several
international and national World Bank and IMF forums. Obaigbena has
also served in think tanks sponsored by these two organizations (ThisDay,
2006). It is typical to discover that publishers, directors,
journalists, and other key positions within local media and
telecommunications industries are trained in the central nations of
the current international communication system, which tends to
reinforce Western media models as well as Western perspectives of
the media’s role in a society (Crabtree and Malhotra, 2003; Nyamnjoh,
2005).
Both newspapers’ headlines
are dominated by the recent debate in the Nigerian government.
Nigeria’s government is a federal republic modeled after the U.S.
government with an Executive Branch, Senate and House of
Representatives (World Fact Book, 2006). The essence of the debate
concerns the party in power, the People’s Democratic Party, (PDP)
and one of its leaders, current President Obasanjo, who want to
change the Nigerian constitution to allow presidents to serve a
third term. President Obasanjo, the first to serve in this office
after a Nigerian civil war, was elected in 2003 (World Fact Book,
2006). The next election is to be held in 2007, thus the salience of
the PDP’s move to change the constitution. Presented as a simple
polity, one side argues that the move to change the constitution to
include a third presidential term is a dangerous slide toward
dictatorship and polarization between the government and
underrepresented groups who may continue to be unrecognized or
eventually disenfranchised, a projected formula for civil war in the
minds of some Nigerians. The other side argues that a third term
under Obasanjo and the PDP might prove to be good for Nigeria’s
economic and political development in terms of stability, citing
this administration’s record regarding these areas of national
development since 2003. There are many positions in between these
two simplified perspectives, but the gist of the debate concerns
political, and so economic, power and who will wield it in Nigeria
after the upcoming Presidential election (Nigerian Tribune, 2006;
ThisDay, 2006).
Perhaps these present
components of the Nigerian press and this debate that dominates
Nigeria’s news reports at the moment could be explained as
successful outcomes, or processes, of applied modernization, or
development, theory as proposed by Lerner and later by Schramm (Thussu,
2000). Meaning, transferring ideologies and practical models of
Western society to former colonies such as Nigeria, for example,
which were/are regarded as "backward" by Western European standards
(Thussu, 2000). Or, perhaps further explained by Schiller’s theory
of cultural imperialism in which leaders facilitate a former
colonial society’s entrance into the world economic and political
system by reorganizing social institutions, such as the media or
government operations, to propagate the values and structures of the
dominant center of the system (Thussu, 2000). However, a closer look
at the population of Nigeria and the actual social conditions of
this West African state reveals another perspective of these current
events.
Nigeria’s population as
estimated in July 2005 was 128,771,988. Sixty percent of this
population has an income below the poverty line and the average life
expectancy of a Nigerian citizen is 46 years (World Fact Book,
2006). The literacy rate, defined as people age 15 and older that
can read and write, is only 68%. Besides English as the official
language, there are four other languages spoken throughout Nigeria
by the four main ethnic groups (World Fact Book, 2006). In 2003,
there were 750,000 Internet users; the majority of these users
described as young male professionals located in the urban areas of
the state (Nyamnjoh, 2005; World Fact Book, 2006). In all of
Nigeria, it is estimated there are 6.9 million television sets
(World Fact Book, 2006). Clearly, this demographic information about
Nigeria does not match the image of the Nigeria presented by this
state’s main print and electronic media. If development theory has
been successful in Nigeria, one outcome since independence has been
the development of an urban, professional middle class that is
reading about and discussing the power struggles of an elite, or
governing class via a public media organized on the Western model;
as preferred by this leadership if according to the theory of
cultural imperialism. Perhaps this class is taking sides, or perhaps
wondering how they will be affected in the future as this struggle
plays out, i.e. in this situation the media functions as a mediator
for negotiations between classes. The outcome, then, more closely
indicates hegemonic relations among social classes based on
populations’ positions relative to social production, as per Gramsci.
This perspective provides a clearer view of Nigeria’s media dynamics
as well as the political, social and cultural issues these dynamics
reflect.
According to World Fact
Book (2006) demographics, roughly half of Nigeria’s population
probably does not have regular, if any, access to the facts and
arguments presented on the Internet. Moreover, 68% of the population
could not read them if they did have access. Those who cannot read
may not have access to a television set or radio, either, where they
could, at least, listen to the claims of the current constitutional
debate. Moreover, those who do not speak English would not be able
to understand the language in these main media examples without
translators even if they had access to both the Internet and the TV
and could read as well. There is a substantial (as in numbers)
social class described here that has an understanding of and
opinions about the debates mentioned above. The results as they
unfold will also affect their future, probably more sharply than any
affects within a middle class. Yet, unless the author and other
international readers are in Nigeria, able to read and speak the
local languages and are a part of the oral network, we cannot know
this class’ understanding of or opinions about, for instance,
changing the national constitution to permit presidents to serve
third terms. As in the colonial eras, the rest of the world sees the
image of Nigeria that a relatively small proportion of that state’s
population, perhaps in affiliation with TMCs or not, prefers the
world to see because it is able to direct and/or create and
distribute content via the mass media. Furthermore, international
readers and/or viewers of Nigeria’s media treat these
representations as reliable facts they might act upon, even if only
to form an opinion.
International and national
media often give us a glimpse, if one reads between the lines, of
every day conditions and the consequent struggles of this
substantial social class in Nigeria. For example, late April 2006
editions of Reuters and the Nigerian Tribune reported
the following composite of multiple stories of kidnappings and car
bombings of military barracks in the Niger Delta, and near oil
refineries in the region as well. Such a composite is possible
because both sources most likely dip into the same international
news pools for stories due to the operations of approximately five
TMCs that dominate world news industries (Thussu, 2000). MEND, or
Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, claimed
responsibility for the bombings, which are part of continuing
guerilla attacks by this organization representing the Ijaw
inhabitants of the Niger Delta. This population, indigenous to the
region, remains desperately poor despite the rich oil industry that
infiltrates their land. MEND claims that it is trying to force
President Obasanjo to recognize their grievances and provide relief
from their poverty via guerilla tactics that have, in some weeks,
cut oil production as much as 550,000 barrels a day and reduced
exports by 20% since January 2006. Obasanjo responded in meetings
with other Niger Delta leaders by revealing plans for 20,000 new
jobs in the region plus new roads and education and healthcare
funds. MEND’s leaders boycotted the meeting, claiming the promised
jobs were menial.
The reports by both news
media represented MEND as a violent, irrational organization. The
presence of the military barracks in this region, though, was
represented as a protective organization established in the Niger
Delta for the benefit of the people and the oil refineries some
labor within. However, the Nigerian military has, in turn, attacked
MEND militias and taken two of the organization’s leaders into state
custody, i.e. imprisoned them. Again, there is a difference of
perspective depending on the political and socioeconomic interests
of those who control global and local mass media. The author does
not condone MEND’s violence that has killed innocent people who were
literally caught in the crossfire. The point is to illustrate that
although it is difficult to know the lived experiences of the Ijaw
in this example, one may glean an impression of the reality of their
daily lives behind the images presented of them. More substantially,
the decision to resort to consistent violence in order to gain
recognition states their extreme desperation over these conditions.
At the end of the day, both global and local media only recognize
state violence as legitimate violence. Similarly, a large
"voiceless" and "invisible" class exists globally that is more often
ignored by mass media or presented in a negative light, as in West
Africa.
Broadcast media in West
Africa is also a complex warren of interconnecting global and local
media relations that affect content that, in turn, affects
political, social and cultural issues. The role of Ghana Television
(GTV) has evolved from one of development, in the sense of
modernization, to mirroring global and local phenomena (Nuviadenu,
2005). Television service in Ghana began in 1965 with the
establishment of state-owned GTV operated by the Ghana Broadcasting
Corporation (GBC). GTV broadcast to all of Ghana; education and the
development of Ghana’s national and social ideals were this
station’s primary goals (Nuviadenu, 2005). However, over the years,
GTV and several other privately owned smaller television stations,
TV3, Metro TV and Crystal TV, tended to become an elite, urban
medium, not the medium of the people as imagined in 1965 (Nuviadenu,
2005). Nuviadenu’s (2005) study of international program flow on
Ghana television from 1969-2003 reflects this transition. For
instance, 100% of the programs broadcast on GTV in 1969 were
educational, i.e. a form of distance education, and in English,
according to the government’s agenda for this medium. Yet, jumping
ahead to 1984, Nuviadenu (2005) found that 93% of programs on GTV
were local and 7% were foreign. The content had changed as well,
more local talk shows were aired and imported programming consisted
mostly of sporting events, e.g. soccer games, and movies. The amount
of broadcast hours increased over time as well due to technological
advances and economic progression within Ghana (Nuviadenu, 2005).
Jumping to the present era, Nuviadenu (2005) found that in 2003, 120
programs (58%) were locally produced and about 86 programs (46%)
were primarily from the U.S. and Europe, although a few were
imported from other African nations. Many of the same or similar
programs from a GTV guide for 2001 were possibly listed in US
television guides during the same year, e.g. Everybody Loves
Raymond, Animal Kingdom, Cartoons, soap operas and various
US-based news programs (Nuviadenu, 2005). The local shows on GTV,
such as African Journal, tended to reflect Western formula
models, and so Western cultural values and perceptions, with nuances
of African cultural values and perceptions, a sort of hybrid product
representing a blend of global consumer culture and local culture (Eko,
2003; Nuviadenu, 2005; Thussu, 2000).
Hybridity in the context
of television programming is an especially critical cultural issue
because this medium has such a significant influence on humans’
perception of reality (Nuviadenu, 2005). Eko (2003) predicted the
hybridity that results, in Africa for example, from the domination
of TMCs within international communication flows threatens to
obliterate traditional African cultures. Crabtree and Malhotra
(2003) discuss this same threat in an Indian context. As these
authors note, the reinforcement of U.S. and European hegemonic
ideology within entertainment media erodes local cultural values and
perspectives of social relations (Crabtree and Malhotra, 2003; Eko,
2003). Not only culture is affected by the interaction of global and
local media, but also economic and political distinctions between
social classes are sharpened, especially since the 1990s and
subsequent global deregulations and privatizations (Crabtree and
Maholtra, 2003).
Heath (2001) also studied
the GBC, but focused on the changes in regional radio since
constitutional governance was reestablished in 1992 and private
broadcasting became legal for the first time. Heath’s study is
significant in that radio is the most accessible, and therefore, the
most utilized medium of West Africans seeking news, educational
broadcasts and entertainment (Eko, 2003). The rapid development of
telecommunication technologies coupled with neo-liberal trade
policies enforced by the WTO and ITU eventually changed the radio
programs that were broadcast under the control of the GBC as it
changed the source of funding for this corporation (Heath, 2001).
The new Ghanian constitution mandated that the GBC would receive a
significant cut in state funding. Instead of relying on state
revenues, the GBC was expected to restructure its operations to
attract more advertising revenues from private enterprises (Heath,
2001). As a result, the GBC’s orientation toward public broadcast
ideals of accessibility and participation of all changed to being
dependent on the vested interests of local and global commercial
media corporations and grants solicited from NGOs (Heath, 2001).
The changes led to more
broadcasts in English and less in indigenous languages of Ghana,
i.e. at least four different languages and their sub-dialects.
Translation summaries of news broadcasts could no longer keep up
with the demand imposed by the new flow of English only programming
flooding the airwaves. Some regions were down to only two hours of
indigenous language broadcasting a day. When radio is the main
source of news in a geo-region, this is a significant change for
many rural populations (Heath, 2001). Ghana, like Nigeria, has large
income gaps among its workforce, 31% of this smaller nation’s
population of 21,029,853 lives below the poverty line (World Fact
Book, 2006) and depends on radios for news and entertainment. In
sum, Heath (2001) noted that the least advantaged populations of
Ghana, e.g. elderly, physically disabled, poor women, ignored by
advertisers seeking consumer markets are neglected in terms of radio
programming attuned to their needs and interests. Regional FM radio
in Ghana has now become attuned to urban, middle class
professionals, much as GTV now channels the Western images to this
same social class. Readers may sample the programming offered by
JoyFM (http://www.myjoyonline.com)
as an example of one of Ghana’s three main radio stations. The
experience is much the same as listening to a major station in
Chicago or other U.S. metropolitan regions. Both mediums have become
tools for the development of consumer markets rather than tools that
serve the communities within Ghana (Heath, 2001). Still, these same
tools are utilized to criticize such consumer-oriented development
wherever it becomes possible to establish more independent media,
such as Freedom Radio or the Nigerian Guardian.
The Guardian is one
example of an independent newspaper that elaborates on the West
African tradition of radio trottoir by featuring political
cartoons as one aspect of the daily’s critical coverage of Nigeria’s
government (Nyamnjoh, 2005). Political cartoons have become very
popular in West African press since the deregulation of state-owned
media in the 1990s brought more opportunities to evolve this
region’s long-standing tradition of radio trottoir in a more
modern form (Nyamnjoh, 2005). The content of these cartoons echo the
editorial position of this independent news source in relation to
the debates over a third term presidency. The illustration, titled
"Undiplomatic Soldjering", depicts a moving car occupied by two men
having a conversation on the way from here to there, a very typical
daily act in many modern societies. The driver says he’s heard that
President Obasanjo is writing a book titled The Animal Called Man,
a reference here to the practice of political rumor as well as a
commentary on current social conditions/relations in Nigeria and,
perhaps, on Obasanjo personally. The passenger responds that he’s
heard the president is writing a different book. The driver asks,
"What book? My Will Part II?" This comment refers, possibly,
to a "political death" of sorts for the President and his party, the
PDP, which could lose power due to unpopularity if the third term
movement backfires. Or, it could refer to an overbearing will on the
part of Obasanjo, again a more personal interpretation. The
passenger again responds negatively, "No, My Command Part II."
This "punch line" suggests that the push for a third term smacks of
military rule and dictatorship (Guardian, May 11, 2006). This
independent newspaper serves as one example of the familiar
negotiation of political power and leadership within public
discourse, even though it may appear there is little space for
critical discourse and different perspectives of social phenomena,
let alone negotiation of power relations within this new era of
global communications in which TMCs have gained so much control over
global and local media.
Overall, the forms and
content of West African media in Ghana and Nigeria arise from
material and practical social relations over time, and so, give
evidence of these concrete relationships as they have evolved from
the colonial era to the present. Although there are positions that
argue the media shapes social relations, there seems to be a
preponderance of evidence in this very general overview able to tip
the argument in favor of the opposite view, social relations shape
the mass media, especially social relations to production. More
accurately, it is the dialectical interaction of the media and
social relations that produces histories and current trends like
those examined in this paper. The colonial era, in part, came about
because industrial development in central nations of that epoch’s
world system needed new and abundant sources of low wage labor and
natural resources that could be processed inexpensively. Although
the development of international communication was driven, in part,
by the necessity of commerce to communicate over distances with
these colonies, the ever expanding and more efficient means of
communication afforded a mass media that could serve political,
social and culture interests as well. It is not feasible for any
state to maintain economic and political dominance over large
populations through military force alone. Thus, a hegemonic mass
media functions as this term suggests, a mass mediator for the
negotiation of power in a global social system.
As the historical context
suggests in the case of West Africa, the colonial powers used mass
media, in part, to negotiate the consent of the colonized for their
economic and political agendas and, in part, to control dissent of
the colonized against these same economic and political agendas.
Correspondingly, in the post-colonial era the media was used in much
the same way by the governing class of the newly independent West
African states to gain legitimacy among the governed class. In the
current era of global and local communications, the West African
elites function as affiliates, albeit dependent affiliates, among
the dominant global class. As affiliates, they negotiate nationalism
among the local class that is often experiencing the extreme poverty
created by globalization of social production. While at the same
time, national borders are transcended by the dominant global class
during commercial ventures. All of these negotiations require a tool
able to mediate such complex relations. Today’s global media
continues to be one such tool. How global communications will evolve
from here remains to be seen. Thus, this paper concludes with a call
for more research that focuses on global media as an integral part
of hegemonic negotiations between social classes. Such a focus may
lead to new theoretical understanding of the relationships between
society and its mass media.
References
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