| Human Rights and African Airwaves: Mediating Equality on the Chichewa Radio Subjects: Radio broadcasting -- Social aspects -- Malawi; Radio broadcasting Chewa -- Malawi; Nkhani Zam’maboma (Radio program); Public radio -- Malawi; Human rights in mass media; Malawi Broadcasting Corporation; Malawi -- Social conditions; Ethnology -- Malawi; Human Rights and African Airwaves focuses on Nkhani Zam'maboma, a popular Chichewa news bulletin broadcast on Malawi's public radio. The program often takes authorities to task and questions much of the human rights rhetoric that comes from international organizations. Highlighting obligation and mutual dependence, the program expresses, in popular idioms and local narrative forms, grievances and injustices that are closest to Malawi's impoverished public. Harri Englund reveals broadcasters' everyday struggles with state-sponsored biases and a listening public with strong views and a critical ear. This fresh look at African-language media shows how Africans effectively confront inequality, exploitation, and poverty. Harri Englund is Reader in Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge. He is author of Prisoners of Freedom: Human Rights and the African Poor, winner of the 2006 Amaury Talbot Prize of the Royal Anthropological Institute. |