Abstract

The contemporary South African press presents an antagonistic depiction of the actions ofJulius Malema, the expelled (pending appeal) president of the African National CongressYouth League (ANCYL). This depiction embodies the oppositional political force the pressexhibits in its representation of the near hegemonic political power of the ANC. In itsassumed capacity of socio-political watchdog the press propagates influential depictions ofthe political elite, depicting selected individuals in antipathetic terms. These representations,which if assumed only as objective portrayals, neglect the intended opposition that the pressacts in as ‘fourth estate.’ This study canvasses the aversive manner in which Julius Malemais pictured in the South African press through conducting a content analysis of two SouthAfrican daily newspapers, The Cape Times and The Sowetan. The study analyses fiveintensely media-covered events in which Malema was central. Though the depiction ofMalema does not present intrinsic malevolence, his actions are presented as antagonisticthrough predominantly episodic and emotive framing. His explicitly insolent diction is usedas fodder to engage resistance. Such reporting signifies irresponsibility where, within adecontextualised framework, selective sound-bite journalism manipulates readers,accordingly shaping content from truncated snippets that are patched together within aprevailing media logic.

Highlights

  • Background and Research Aims MrMalema, for his cutthroat narration of issues and his radical ideology, has become an extremely mediatized individual, a bogeyman of sorts

  • Aims Mr Malema, for his cutthroat narration of issues and his radical ideology, has become an extremely mediatized individual, a bogeyman of sorts. He is a man who occupies his own niche in the workings of the South African press due to his unparalleled status as youth, and possible future, leader as well as being a rabble-rouser whose controversial speeches provoke revolutionary action

  • This study aims to exhibit his depiction as constructed to fit into the South African political and public domain, where he is positioned http://globalmedia.journals.ac.za alongside political, business and social elites

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Summary

Introduction

Background and Research Aims MrMalema, for his cutthroat narration of issues and his radical ideology, has become an extremely mediatized individual, a bogeyman of sorts. Perennially surrounded by the game frame, and his personal niche in the South African press will be canvassed in order to interpret the present day media logic.

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