Rainbow Worriers: South African Afropessimism Online. Rainbow Worriers: South African Afropessimism Online.

Rainbow Worriers: South African Afropessimism Online‪.‬

Critical Arts 2011, Sept, 25, 3

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

Abstract The relationship between the rise of Afropessimism and the growth of global communication networks is more or less proportionate with the deepening of the digital divide. With fewer internal sources of information, news networks are portraying events in Africa as more tragic, more mysterious and more distant than ever before. This, in turn, has an off-putting effect on foreign investors and donors, who are becoming increasingly impatient with mounting reports of African corruption, misrule and political unrest. While South Africa's relatively advanced media infrastructure should exempt it from this trend, the discourse of Afropessimism is highly visible, both in news about the country and in posted responses to headlines. This article is concerned with the reception of reports on South Africa by one of the most vocal online groups commenting on events in the country: white expatriates. Focusing on the web presence of a number of popular sites, ranging from the Afro-dystopic to the Afro-optimistic, the article analyses the ways in which some South Africans living abroad are active in spreading pessimistic views about their homeland--a trend that is important because these views are beginning to dominate online responses. The article concludes that the high visibility of Afropessimism on blogs and on platforms such as YouTube is cause for concern, firstly because it indicates that events in South Africa are rapidly distancing it from world opinion, and secondly, because the country's future failure is increasingly being represented as a fait accompli.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2011
September 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
47
Pages
PUBLISHER
Critical Arts Projects
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
228.7
KB

More Books Like This

Borders, Media Crossings and the Politics of Translation Borders, Media Crossings and the Politics of Translation
2019
White Saviorism and Popular Culture White Saviorism and Popular Culture
2022
The Everyday Experience of Xenophobia: Performing the Crossing from Zimbabwe to South Africa (Essay) The Everyday Experience of Xenophobia: Performing the Crossing from Zimbabwe to South Africa (Essay)
2010
Afropolitanism: Reboot Afropolitanism: Reboot
2017
Routledge Handbook of African Popular Culture Routledge Handbook of African Popular Culture
2022
Africa's Media Image in the 21st Century Africa's Media Image in the 21st Century
2016

More Books by Critical Arts

The Haitian Revolution and the Articulation of a Modernist Epistemology. The Haitian Revolution and the Articulation of a Modernist Epistemology.
2011
Corruption, Tribalism and Democracy: Coded Messages in Wambali Mkandawire's Popular Songs in Malawi (Critical Essay) Corruption, Tribalism and Democracy: Coded Messages in Wambali Mkandawire's Popular Songs in Malawi (Critical Essay)
2009
Narrating Baghdad: Representing the Truth of War in Popular Non-Fiction (Baghdad Burning: Girl Blog from Iraq) (Thieves of Baghdad) (Critical Essay) Narrating Baghdad: Representing the Truth of War in Popular Non-Fiction (Baghdad Burning: Girl Blog from Iraq) (Thieves of Baghdad) (Critical Essay)
2007
C.L.R. James, Pan-Africanism and the Black Radical Tradition (Report) (Company Overview) C.L.R. James, Pan-Africanism and the Black Radical Tradition (Report) (Company Overview)
2011
Biopolitical Production, The Common, And a Happy Ending: On Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri's Commonwealth. Biopolitical Production, The Common, And a Happy Ending: On Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri's Commonwealth.
2011
African Intellectuals in the Belly of the Beast: Migration, Identity and the Politics of African Intellectuals in the North (1). African Intellectuals in the Belly of the Beast: Migration, Identity and the Politics of African Intellectuals in the North (1).
2003