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Indigenous African Communication and Media Systems in a Digitized Age

Edited by Unwana Samuel Akpan and Eddah Mbula Mutua - Foreword by Des Wilson - Contributions by Abayomi Bamidele Adisa; Paul Agada; Unwana Samuel Akpan; Shamilla Amulega; Herbert Batta; Nnamdi Tobechukwu Ekeanyanwu; Isaac Olajide Fadeyi; Aloysius Chukwuebuka Ifeanyichukwu; Shirley Marang Kekana; Kehbuma Langmia; Perminus Matiure; Almon Moyo; Khulekani F. Moyo; Richard Muranda; Absolom Mutavati; Eddah Mbula Mutua; Iniobong Courage Nda; Paul Obi; Abigail Odozi Ogwezzy-Ndisika; Henry Chibueze Ogaraku; Ihuoma Okorie; Oyinloye Oloyede; Chuka Onwumechili; Akinola Moses Owolabi; Ibitayo Samuel Popoola; Jerry Rutsate; Muhammad Hamisu Sani and Bernice Oluwalaanu Sanusi

Through a meticulous exploration of oral traditions and community-based media practices, Unwana Samuel Akpan, Eddah Mutua, and the contributors of Indigenous African Communication and Media Systems in a Digitized Age explore the intricate interplay between traditional African communication methods and the modern digital terrain to unveil how these age-old systems are continuously evolving in response to globalization and digital advancements. From the rhythmic beats of the talking drum to the vibrant tapestry of oral histories, this book traces how Indigenous African societies have historically disseminated knowledge and preserved cultural identities. It examines the transformative impact of digital technologies on these practices to explore the rise of social media, mobile connectivity, and online storytelling platforms within African contexts. Akpan and Mutua challenge conventional narratives of media development by highlighting the resilience and relevance of African cultural expressions in an increasingly interconnected world. This book is essential reading for Afrocentric scholars and those interested in media studies, cultural anthropology, and the dynamic intersections of tradition and technology.

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Lexington Books
Pages: 284 • Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-66696-530-8 • Hardback • February 2025 • $115.00 • (£88.00)
978-1-66696-531-5 • eBook • February 2025 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Subjects: Political Science / World / African, Social Science / Anthropology / Cultural, Social Science / Media Studies

Unwana Samuel Akpan is lecturer in the Department of Mass Communication at the University of Lagos.

Eddah Mbula Mutua is professor of Intercultural Communication at St. Cloud State University.

Foreword

Des Wilson

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Des Wilson and the Enduring Legacy in Preserving African Indigenous Communication and Media Systems

Unwana Samuel Akpan and Eddah Mbula Mutua

Part I: Importance of African Indigenous Communication and Media Systems

Chapter 1: Relevance of Des Wilson’s African Indigenous Media Research Track in a Digitized Age

Kehbuma Langmia

Chapter 2: Examining the Impact of Digital Technology on African Indigenous Media in Botswana: A Potential Challenge to Sustainability/Longevity

Shirley Marang Kekana

Chapter 3: African Traditional Communication System in the Age of Hybridity: Habitual Media Customs and the Digital in the Nigerian Glocal Spaces

Muhammad Hamisu Sani and Paul Obi

Part II: Adaptation and Co-existence in the Digital Age

Chapter 4: Communicating Emerging Science, Technology, and Innovation in Nigeria for Development in the Digital Age: Where Does Des Wilson’s Trado-modern Media Come In?

Herbert Batta

Chapter 5: Ifa Divination, Extra-mundane Communication and Internet: An Overview

Akinola Moses Owolabi, Bernice Oluwalaanu Sanusi, Oyinloye Oloyede, and Isaac Olajide Fadeyi

Chapter 6: New Media Versus Traditional Media: 27 Years After Emergence of Internet in Nigeria

Ibitayo Samuel Popoola and Paul Agada

Chapter 7: African Language Media and BBC Yoruba Service Sports Headlines: Influence on Audience Engagement Online

Unwana Samuel Akpan, Chuka Onwumechili, Abayomi Bamidele Adisa, and Abigail Odozi Ogwezzy-Ndisika

Chapter 8: Egbe Bere Ugo Bere (Live and Let Live) Cultural Experiment as a Case Study on Igbo Traditional Public Relations Practice in Contemporary Digital Culture

Nnamdi Tobechukwu Ekeanyanwu, Henry Chibueze Ogaraku, and Aloysius Chukwuebuka Ifeanyichukwu

Part III: Enduring Relevance of African Indigenous Communication Systems in the Digital Age

Chapter 9: Traditional Town Criers in Kenya and Nigeria: Enduring Relevance in the Digital Age

Shamilla Amulega, Unwana Samuel Akpan, and Eddah Mbula Mutua

Chapter 10: Nurturing Indigenous African Communication Modes in a Digital Age: Performing Igbo Proverbs in Film for Advice and Warning

Ihuoma Okorie

Chapter 11: Implications of the Two Step Flow Theory on Traditional Leadership in the Digital Age: The Case of Annang People in Akwa Ibom State in Nigeria

Iniobong Courage Nda

Chapter 12: Survival of Musical and Nonmusical Indigenous Namibian Media in the Digitized Age

Perminus Matiure

Chapter 13: Digital Technology in Breaking Information Barriers and the Preservation of Musical Arts in Zimbabwe

Richard Muranda, Absolom Mutavati, Khulekani F. Moyo, and Almon Moyo

Chapter 14: Vimbuza and Gule Wamkulu Traditional Dances as Enduring Malawian Indigenous Media Systems in the Digital Age

Jerry Rutsate

About the Contributors

An incisive and contemporaneous contribution from an African perspective. Surely this will satisfy the curiosity of scholars who hitherto might have thought that nothing good could come from this part of the world.


— Olusola Oyeyinka Oyewo, University of Ibadan


This book shines light on the integration of traditional Indigenous African processes of communication into the technological space. It further provides knowledge of Indigenous communication systems to understand their relevance in the present, past, and future while concurrently promoting inclusion in the digital age as an effective way of sustaining its rich culture through media. This book makes a great contribution to the pedagogy of Indigenous communication combined with new media, that is not limited to the African continent nor the Black races but enhances frontiers of knowledge within African communication theory and practice. It also serves as a great source of reference for students, scholars, communicators, researchers, and practitioners in the field of communication and media studies.


— Ernest Yeboah Acheampong, University of Education, Winneba


Indigenous African Communication and Media Systems in a Digitized Age

Cover Image
Hardback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • Through a meticulous exploration of oral traditions and community-based media practices, Unwana Samuel Akpan, Eddah Mutua, and the contributors of Indigenous African Communication and Media Systems in a Digitized Age explore the intricate interplay between traditional African communication methods and the modern digital terrain to unveil how these age-old systems are continuously evolving in response to globalization and digital advancements. From the rhythmic beats of the talking drum to the vibrant tapestry of oral histories, this book traces how Indigenous African societies have historically disseminated knowledge and preserved cultural identities. It examines the transformative impact of digital technologies on these practices to explore the rise of social media, mobile connectivity, and online storytelling platforms within African contexts. Akpan and Mutua challenge conventional narratives of media development by highlighting the resilience and relevance of African cultural expressions in an increasingly interconnected world. This book is essential reading for Afrocentric scholars and those interested in media studies, cultural anthropology, and the dynamic intersections of tradition and technology.

Details
Details
  • Lexington Books
    Pages: 284 • Trim: 6 x 9
    978-1-66696-530-8 • Hardback • February 2025 • $115.00 • (£88.00)
    978-1-66696-531-5 • eBook • February 2025 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
    Subjects: Political Science / World / African, Social Science / Anthropology / Cultural, Social Science / Media Studies
Author
Author
  • Unwana Samuel Akpan is lecturer in the Department of Mass Communication at the University of Lagos.

    Eddah Mbula Mutua is professor of Intercultural Communication at St. Cloud State University.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Foreword

    Des Wilson

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction: Des Wilson and the Enduring Legacy in Preserving African Indigenous Communication and Media Systems

    Unwana Samuel Akpan and Eddah Mbula Mutua

    Part I: Importance of African Indigenous Communication and Media Systems

    Chapter 1: Relevance of Des Wilson’s African Indigenous Media Research Track in a Digitized Age

    Kehbuma Langmia

    Chapter 2: Examining the Impact of Digital Technology on African Indigenous Media in Botswana: A Potential Challenge to Sustainability/Longevity

    Shirley Marang Kekana

    Chapter 3: African Traditional Communication System in the Age of Hybridity: Habitual Media Customs and the Digital in the Nigerian Glocal Spaces

    Muhammad Hamisu Sani and Paul Obi

    Part II: Adaptation and Co-existence in the Digital Age

    Chapter 4: Communicating Emerging Science, Technology, and Innovation in Nigeria for Development in the Digital Age: Where Does Des Wilson’s Trado-modern Media Come In?

    Herbert Batta

    Chapter 5: Ifa Divination, Extra-mundane Communication and Internet: An Overview

    Akinola Moses Owolabi, Bernice Oluwalaanu Sanusi, Oyinloye Oloyede, and Isaac Olajide Fadeyi

    Chapter 6: New Media Versus Traditional Media: 27 Years After Emergence of Internet in Nigeria

    Ibitayo Samuel Popoola and Paul Agada

    Chapter 7: African Language Media and BBC Yoruba Service Sports Headlines: Influence on Audience Engagement Online

    Unwana Samuel Akpan, Chuka Onwumechili, Abayomi Bamidele Adisa, and Abigail Odozi Ogwezzy-Ndisika

    Chapter 8: Egbe Bere Ugo Bere (Live and Let Live) Cultural Experiment as a Case Study on Igbo Traditional Public Relations Practice in Contemporary Digital Culture

    Nnamdi Tobechukwu Ekeanyanwu, Henry Chibueze Ogaraku, and Aloysius Chukwuebuka Ifeanyichukwu

    Part III: Enduring Relevance of African Indigenous Communication Systems in the Digital Age

    Chapter 9: Traditional Town Criers in Kenya and Nigeria: Enduring Relevance in the Digital Age

    Shamilla Amulega, Unwana Samuel Akpan, and Eddah Mbula Mutua

    Chapter 10: Nurturing Indigenous African Communication Modes in a Digital Age: Performing Igbo Proverbs in Film for Advice and Warning

    Ihuoma Okorie

    Chapter 11: Implications of the Two Step Flow Theory on Traditional Leadership in the Digital Age: The Case of Annang People in Akwa Ibom State in Nigeria

    Iniobong Courage Nda

    Chapter 12: Survival of Musical and Nonmusical Indigenous Namibian Media in the Digitized Age

    Perminus Matiure

    Chapter 13: Digital Technology in Breaking Information Barriers and the Preservation of Musical Arts in Zimbabwe

    Richard Muranda, Absolom Mutavati, Khulekani F. Moyo, and Almon Moyo

    Chapter 14: Vimbuza and Gule Wamkulu Traditional Dances as Enduring Malawian Indigenous Media Systems in the Digital Age

    Jerry Rutsate

    About the Contributors

Reviews
Reviews
  • An incisive and contemporaneous contribution from an African perspective. Surely this will satisfy the curiosity of scholars who hitherto might have thought that nothing good could come from this part of the world.


    — Olusola Oyeyinka Oyewo, University of Ibadan


    This book shines light on the integration of traditional Indigenous African processes of communication into the technological space. It further provides knowledge of Indigenous communication systems to understand their relevance in the present, past, and future while concurrently promoting inclusion in the digital age as an effective way of sustaining its rich culture through media. This book makes a great contribution to the pedagogy of Indigenous communication combined with new media, that is not limited to the African continent nor the Black races but enhances frontiers of knowledge within African communication theory and practice. It also serves as a great source of reference for students, scholars, communicators, researchers, and practitioners in the field of communication and media studies.


    — Ernest Yeboah Acheampong, University of Education, Winneba


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