It is no gainsaying that the new media: the Internet, DVD, etc, had
tremendously aided education through the adoption and usage of e-learning by
some African states. There has been an increasing use of the new media,
especially, the Internet by African universities and other educational
institutions. Admission and examinations are now being conducted online and
African students now make active use of e-library as well as the use of search
engine optimization in carrying out their research works. The degree of
importance of the applicability of the new media to improve education in Africa is exploding and expanding daily and continually.
Globalization and the new media have further increased the level of interaction
and collaboration between and among African students and lecturers and their
counterparts in Europe, the Americas
and other parts of the world.
However, it has also been observed that over indulgence in the use
of the new media by the active African youths had detrimentally affected the
quality of education and performance of students in Africa.
Precious times are wasted playing around with mobile phones, and browsing the
net. Students are no longer patronizing the library to read and to conduct
research, whereas, this accounted for the demise of the reading culture in Africa.
Another negative aspect is the use of abbreviations in text
messaging (SMS) on mobile phones and chatting in virtual places such as
Facebook. This had eaten deep into the fabrics of the students to the extent
that it has been observed that most students are no longer writing correct
spelling and good grammatical structure in their examination essays again. They
make use of the online abbreviations that they are accustomed to. It is not an
exaggeration that this is predominant in most Nigerian universities and it is
worrisome.
In April 2010, Kenyan media reported that the Supreme Council of
Kenya Muslims had banned the satellite broadcasting by DSTv in Mandera town, NorthEasternProvince. “Also outlawed
are video dens, blamed for eroding moral values among the youth and causing
poor academic performance.” 13
The concept of a media culture has evolved owing to the increased
volume, varied and importance of mediated signs and messages and the interplay
of interlaced meanings. At present, the global media culture is a pedagogic
force that has the potential to exceed the achievements of institutionalized
forms of education. Henry Giroux succinctly puts it this way: “with the rise of
new media technologies and the global reach of the highly concentrated culture
industries, the scope and impact of the educational force of culture in shaping
and refiguring all aspect of daily life appear unprecedented. Yet, the current
debates have generally ignored the powerful pedagogical influence of popular
culture, along with the implications it has for shaping curricula, questioning
the relationship between the culture of schooling and the culture of everyday
life.”14
end notes
13 Daily Nation (Kenya), April 27, 2010.
14 H.
Giroux, Impure Acts: The Practical Politics of Cultural Studies (New York and London,
Rutledge, 2000), 32
With the fancy and all the frenzy about globalization, it is
evident that globalization is not new, however, as a great phenomenon; its
influence cutting across all facets of life are continuously being experienced
by nation-states of the world. The multitudinous influence of globalization is
also being accentuated by the proliferation of the Information and
Communications Technologies (ICTs), especially, the ever emerging new media
which in all characterization has turned the world into a wholesome entity with
high interrelatedness and interconnectedness between and among varied
civilizations, culture, and communities of the world. Hence, through the
instrumentality of globalization and the wide currency the new media had
attracted and according to Marshall McLuhan the world had turned to become a
global village. For instance, the ongoing Arab Spring characterizing some of
the countries of North Africa has been tagged
“Facebook Revolution”. Decisively, this article sets to do a critical
assessment of some of the effects of globalization as well as that of the new
media on Africa culture.
No matter where Africans turn to, through mobile phone and internet
application devices, they encounter the new media, It is evident that
globalization and the new media are like two Siamese twins. They are highly
intertwined and inseparable. Indeed, in the recent time the new media is
seriously accentuating globalization and sky-rocketing its potency all over the
world.
Reportedly, 2003 World Youth Report on Youth and Information and
Communication Technology hypothesize that “two major assumptions underline the
role of the new media: the first is that proliferation of the technologies is
causing rapid transformation in all areas of life; the second is that the new
media function to unify and standardize culture.”8
In its entire ramification the new media just like globalization is creating
a global system of culture for the international system. Importantly, with
economic, social, cultural and political interaction between and among states
in the international system, there have been cross fertilization of ideas and
culture in particular. Through cultural diplomacy which is orchestrated by
globalization, nation-states of the world are interacting culturally at the
highest level through conferences and events such as cultural festivals and
carnivals as well as during sporting events.
The exploding new media realities and globalization are sensed as
both a gift and a threat especially to African culture. The new infomedia
technologies have created new spaces and new contexts for the emerging new
virtual and cyber communities where amalgamation of varied cultures of
different civilizations and races is taking place. Significantly, African
culture is not an exception.
There are many Africans today, who only perceive the media realities
as a fear-provoking threat, especially considering the ways African culture is
being polluted and bastardized with the so-called western civilization which
had formed the major component of the new media or global culture being subtly
imposed on African youths.
African youths are daily experiencing the bombardment of images,
sounds, and words through bursting of the new media technologies that screeches
out to capture the imagination of people today. As said earlier on, western
culture has become the de-facto culture of the new media or globalization.
which according to some scholars has no redemptive values to African
culture and by its nature is distracting, manipulative and oppressive to Africa
thereby subjugating African culture as inferior and barbaric which is in line
with the spirit of neo-imperialism and/or globalization. Globalization has
generated a lot of controversy with regard to the rise of a global culture.
Western norms and practices are gradually being transported across the globe as
the acceptable way of behaviour. In view of this, rich and dynamic African
culture has been diluted.9
By definition, what globalization does is to make all other cultures
local. According to Jeremy, globalization is a declaration of war upon all
other cultures.10 There is no doubt that with high intensity,
globalization and the new media have dragged African culture into disrepute and
cultural doldrums.
The new media also riffles the fabrics of African social networks. In
a typical African traditional setting or community children are expected to
keep company with the aged or the elderly who would then impart the wisdom of the
land to the younger generation, however, this is becoming difficult when the
children spend most of their time surfing the net or bubbling with mobile
devices. To most African youths nowadays tales by moonlight is a myth or
fiction.
It is suffice to say here, it is not all aspect of the media culture
that is detrimental and sententious to African culture, however, generally
speaking, the new media culture had negatively affected African culture within
the context of ethical values, socialization, dressing, religion, relationship,
sexuality, etc. Absurdity and anomalies such as nudity, homosexuality,
lesbianism, pornography, etc are being passed on to African youths in
particular as major strands of western civilizations symbolizing global
culture.
However, it must be said at this juncture that globalization and the
new media have opened African peoples’ lives to other cultures and all their
creativity and to the flow of ideas and values. Since, in anyway, no culture is
superior to others and characteristically all cultures have their positive and
negative strings. The new media have eased interaction among Africans and
peoples of different cultures. Also, some inhuman cultural practices directed
especially at women, for instance, female genital mutilation (circumcision),
widowhood rites, trokosi, etc are being addressed and modified. 11
Additionally, the new media is working well for African culture. It is
gainfully being deployed to connect families. By sharing pictures and video of
family events with members in the Diaspora, families are able to overcome the
challenges of time and space and get together, which is part of the community
style of living of most Africans.12
Endnotes
8 Youth and information and Communication
Technologies (ICT) (World Youth Report, 2003), 2
9 Yeboah, Kwame. The Impact of Globalization
on African Culture. Odense: University of Southern
Denmark.
10 Jeremy S, “Localizing Cultures,” Korean
Herald (Korea),
January 13, 2004.
2004) page 6
11Jeremy,
S (2004) Localizing Cultures. Korean Herald: January 13, 2004.
12 Andrew Limo, “Information Ethics and the
New Media: Challenges and Opportunities for Kenya’s
Education Sector,” University
of Botswana. (September
2010)