Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T23:10:38.788Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Visual media and political communication: reporting about suffering in Kinshasa*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

Katrien Pype*
Affiliation:
Institute of Anthropological Research in Africa, Parkstraat 35 Box 3615, 3000 Leuven, Belgium

Abstract

Many sub-Saharan African societies have undergone significant political shifts in the last two decades. Changes in political representation and leadership have generated new forms of political mediation and communication. This article interrogates one of the most visible transformations in Kinshasa's political society: television news reports about urban misery, often resulting from a malfunctioning state, in which Kinshasa's inhabitants testify about their difficulties and press fellow citizens, as well as local and national leaders, to bring about change. Exposing suffering is a shame mobilisation strategy, and so becomes a political act. Through the discursive and visual aesthetics of the proximity account, citizens and political leaders are inserted into one political community. The main argument of this article is that the proximity account illustrates a new kind of political communication. In this article I analyse the socio-political contexts in which the proximity report emerged and became popular. I trace the materialisation of this new kind of interaction between political leaders and citizens to the transformation of the late Zaïrian ‘state’, to vernacular understandings of ‘democracy’, and to the influence of NGO activities and Pentecostal Christianity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

The research for this article was conducted in the frame of a project funded by the Newton International Fellowship (British Academy), entitled Presidential Propaganda on Kinshasa's Television Screens: an exploration into politics and media in DRCongo (2009–2010). I would like to thank the various television journalists with whom I have worked and also their audiences. Earlier versions of this text were presented, in different forms, at the ‘intensive media workshop’ organised by the Centre of West African Studies at the University of Birmingham (May 2010) and the ASAUK conference in Oxford (September 2010). I appreciated the comments offered by the participants in both events. Drafts of the text have also been read by Filip De Boeck, Jennifer Hasty and Joshua Walker, all of whom I acknowledge for their valuable suggestions and remarks. I thank the three anonymous reviewers for their comments. I am grateful to Isabelle De Rezende for her editorial assistance.

References

REFERENCES

Barber, K. 2007. The Anthropology of Texts, Persons and Publics: oral and written culture in Africa and beyond. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayart, J. F. 1989. L'Etat en Afrique: la politique du ventre. Paris: Fayard.Google Scholar
Bayart, J. F. 2005. The Illusion of Cultural Identity, translated by Rendall, S., Roitman, J. & Derrick, J.. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Biaya, T. K. 1990. ‘La peinture populaire comme mode d'action politique des classes dominées au Zaïre, 1960–1989’, Contemporary French Civilization 14, 2: 334–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Callaghy, T. 1984. The State-Society Struggle: Zaire in comparative perspective. New York: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chabal, P. 2009. Africa: the politics of suffering and smiling. London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Chatterjee, P. 1997. ‘Beyond the Nation? Or within?’, Economic and Political Weekly (Mumbai), 711 January.Google Scholar
Das, V. 2003. ‘Trauma and Testimony: implications for political community’, Anthropological Theory 3, 3: 293307.Google Scholar
Dayan, D. & Katz, E., eds. 1992. Media Events: the live broadcasting of history. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Boeck, F. 1996. ‘Postcolonialism, power and identity: local and global perspectives from Zaïre’, in Werbner, R. & Ranger, T., eds. Postcolonial Identities in Africa. London: Zed Books, 75106.Google Scholar
De Boeck, F. 2000. ‘Borderland Breccia: the mutant hero and the historical imagination of a Central-African diamond frontier’, Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 1, 2 (e-journal).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Boeck, F. 2004. Kinshasa: tales of the invisible city. Ghent: Ludion.Google Scholar
Frère, M.-S. 2007. The Media and Conflicts in Central Africa. London: Lynne Rienner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geschiere, P. 2009. The Perils of Belonging: autochtony, citizenship, and exclusion in Africa and Europe. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Giovannoni, M., Trefon, T., Kasongo Banga, J. & Mwema, C.. 2004. ‘Agir à la place – et en dépit – de l’État : ONG et associations de la société civile à Kinshasa’, in Trefon, T., ed. Ordre et Désordre à Kinshasa: réponses populaires à la faillite de l’état. Tervuren: Institut Africain/CEDAF, 119–34.Google Scholar
Hansen, T. B. & Stepputat, F., eds. 2001. States of Imagination: ethnographic explorations of the postcolonial state. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, S. 2006. ‘Sons of which soil ? The language and politics of autochtony in eastern D.R. Congo’, African Studies Review 49, 2: 95123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 2003. ‘Une société urbaine “moderne” et ses représentations: la peinture populaire à Kinshasa (Congo) (1960–2000)’, Le Mouvement Social 204, 3: 131–48.Google Scholar
Kaarsholm, P. 2006. ‘State failure, societies in collapse? Understandings of violent conflict in Africa’, in Kaarsholm, P., ed. Violence, Political Culture & Development in Africa. Oxford: James Currey, 120.Google Scholar
Karlström, M. 1996. ‘Imagining Democracy: political culture and democratization in Buganda’, Africa 66, 4: 485505.Google Scholar
Karlström, M. 2003. ‘On the aesthetics and dialogics of power in the postcolony’, Africa 73, 1: 5777.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mbembe, A. 1992. ‘Provisional notes on the postcolony’, Africa 62, 1: 337.Google Scholar
Mbembe, A. 2001. On the Postcolony. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
McLagan, M. 2003. ‘Principles, publicity, and politics: notes on human rights media’, American Anthropologist 105, 3: 605–12.Google Scholar
Nyamnjoh, F. 2005. Africa's Media: democracy and the politics of belonging. London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Pype, K. 2007. ‘Fighting boys, strong men and gorillas: notes on the imagination of masculinities in Kinshasa’, Africa 77, 2: 250–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pype, K. 2009. ‘“We need to open up the country”: development and the Christian key scenario in the social space of Kinshasa's teleserials’, Journal of African Media Studies 1, 1: 101–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pype, K. 2011. ‘Taboos and rebels: or, transgression and regulation in the work and lives of Kinshasa's television journalists’, Popular Communication 9, 2: 114–25.Google Scholar
Pype, K. 2011 forthcoming. ‘Confession-cum-deliverance: in/dividuality of the subject among Kinshasa's born-again Christians’, Journal of Religion in Africa 41, 3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pype, K. 2012 forthcoming. ‘Political billboards as contact zones: politics, urban space and visual ab/presence in Kabila's Kinshasa’, in Vokes, R., ed. Photography in Africa: ethnographic perspectives. Surrey: Boydell and Brewer.Google Scholar
Schatzberg, M. G. 2001. Political Legitimacy in Middle Africa: father, family, food. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Taussig, M. 2006. Walter Benjamin's Grave. University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trefon, T., ed. 2004. Reinventing Order in the Congo: how people respond to state failure in Kinshasa. London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Vlassenroot, K. 2006. ‘A societal view on violence & war: conflict & militia formation in eastern Congo’, in Kaarsholm, P., ed. Violence, Political Culture & Development in Africa. Oxford: James Currey, 4965.Google Scholar
White, B. W. 2008. Rumba Rules: the politics of dance music in Mobutu's Zaïre. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar

Interviews

Bababaswe, Zacharie, JTLF founder, 24.6.2009.

JTLF journalist, Kinshasa, 12.7.2009.

Interviews with journalists and their audiences have been rendered anonymous for security reasons.