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A critical discourse analysis of strategies used to construct South African initiation schools in online news reports and discussion forums

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dc.contributor.advisor Archer, E.
dc.contributor.advisor Terre Blanche, M. J. (Martin J.)
dc.contributor.author Fynn, Angelo
dc.date.accessioned 2015-01-13T07:59:41Z
dc.date.available 2015-01-13T07:59:41Z
dc.date.issued 2014-08
dc.identifier.citation Fynn, Angelo (2014) A critical discourse analysis of strategies used to construct South African initiation schools in online news reports and discussion forums, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/15372> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/15372
dc.description.abstract This thesis examines the discourse strategies used to construct initiation schools in online media and message boards. The focus is on understanding the tensions that come with enacting traditional practices in the face of modernity and its associated cultural expectations. The thesis describes the manner in which these tensions are constructed in text by the media in news reports and participants in discussion forums. While there is still debate around whether the internet will revolutionise public participation and create a digital utopia; the internet is acknowledged as one of the widest reaching sources of information and entertainment. Specifically, the internet provides a platform to challenge the traditionally top-down communication between the elite, who have privileged access to the media, and the general public, who were previously constructed as passive recipients of information. Using the male circumcision initiation rite, this thesis examines how the South African public discursively constructs the epistemic location of African traditions in South Africa. The study drew on a sample of news articles from the News24 site, the largest news site in South Africa, ranging from January 2008 to December 2013. A corpus of 62 articles were analysed using the Critical Discourse Analysis technique described by Teun van Dijk. The findings of the thesis were that the initiation rite is used as a rhetorical tool to argue for the abandonment of African cultural practices in favour of modern, Western influenced beliefs and values. The findings also indicate that the initiation rite is reduced to the act of circumcision in the media by focusing on the injury and deaths of the initiates and excluding the meaning of the rite as a meaningful cultural practice. The conclusion of the thesis challenges the epistemicide committed against the male circumcision initiation rite from within the Decolonial school of thought, which critically examines everyday interaction for universalising, normative language that aims to commit cultural epistemicide to reinforce the white, male, European, Christian traditions of masculinity. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xx, 285 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Male circumcision en
dc.subject Initiation schools en
dc.subject Critical discourse analysis en
dc.subject Decoloniality en
dc.subject Virtual ethnography en
dc.subject Traditional circumcision en
dc.subject Cultural epistemicide en
dc.subject Masculinity en
dc.subject Netnography en
dc.subject.ddc 302.23108350968
dc.subject.lcsh Computer bulletin boards -- Social aspects -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh News Web sites -- Social aspects -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Initiation rites -- Social aspects -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Mass media and culture -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Mass media and youth -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Blacks in mass media en
dc.subject.lcsh Ethnology -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Critical discourse analysis -- South Africa en
dc.title A critical discourse analysis of strategies used to construct South African initiation schools in online news reports and discussion forums en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Psychology en
dc.description.degree D. Litt. et Phil. (Psychology)


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