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Mediated representations of violence against women (VAW) in the South African public broadcasting service: a study of cognitive effects of gendered communication

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dc.contributor.advisor Ngwenya, Blessed, 1980-
dc.contributor.author Manala, Thabile Keletso
dc.date.accessioned 2023-03-15T07:53:48Z
dc.date.available 2023-03-15T07:53:48Z
dc.date.issued 2022-09-12
dc.date.submitted 2023-03
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10500/29882
dc.description.abstract This research seeks to investigate, in an explanatory nature, how South Africa’s broadcast media represents the narrative of gender equality amid the culture of violence against women (VAW) within this society. Feminist scholars have over the years seen the emergence of work concerned with the representation of gender with specific focus on women. The crucial argument is that gender politics are central to the project of representation. In a way representations of women, mostly negative, such as domesticated roles, submissiveness and powerlessness have encouraged this inquiry. The South African Broadcasting Service (SABC), owing to its wide audience reach, has been a key catalyst for the progression and limitations regarding the representation of women. The South African society has been deeply and consistently exposed to the public broadcaster as it has entrenched itself in the living rooms of the nation and created an intimate resonance through daily soap operas that seek to illuminate the populace’s lived experiences. However, dramas and soap operas have not been a passive agent of entertainment. It is either they are a direct expression of social reality or an actual distortion of that reality. They have psychological and social weavings that inform how we attach meaning to the world, each other, and our own selfhood. Thus, in a country spotlighted for Violence Against Women (VAW) and femicide, this study, using four soap operas and three tv dramas investigates how the SABC represents women in its programming content. This qualitative study employs the critical political economy of the media (CPEM) as its theoretical framework to explore gendered dimensions of texts in television representation. Further, an inquisition of gendered production is drawn from Stuart Hall’s encoding/decoding model as the interpretive framework that unpacks the process of representation both at the production/encoding of texts by producers and decoding/consumption by the audiences to map out the true effects. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (112 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Public broadcast media en
dc.subject Democracy en
dc.subject Soap operas en
dc.subject Dramas en
dc.subject Gender en
dc.subject Critical political economy en
dc.subject Violence against women en
dc.subject Gender representation en
dc.subject Commissioning editors en
dc.subject Content creation en
dc.subject Ownership and control en
dc.subject Textual ideology en
dc.subject Authorial ideology en
dc.subject.ddc 384.540968
dc.subject.lcsh Public broadcasting -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Women -- Violence against -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Local mass media -- South Africa en
dc.title Mediated representations of violence against women (VAW) in the South African public broadcasting service: a study of cognitive effects of gendered communication en
dc.type Dissertation en
dc.description.department Communication Science en
dc.description.degree M.A. (Communication Science)


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