The ubiquity of new media technologies in many parts of Africa today and the celebratory narratives with which their adoption is routinely discussed in the continent often firmly silence some important questions. Among these is new media technologies’ inherent capacity to also exclude, neuter or appropriate “popular” voices. This article attempts to explore this paradox. Focusing on Web 2.0 applications, more specifically Twitter, and using Kenya as a case study, the article explores the emergent expressive cultures new media technologies have incubated in the country. It argues that they “disrupt” the “normal” thus creating important pockets of “indiscipline” which variously challenge and confront power, and very often from the margins- bu...
The article discusses the significance of the past in the planning of media policies in two neighbou...
Initial Information and Communication Technologies for Development (ICT4D) discourse embraced Inform...
The fast-growing Internet platform in Africa has given opportunities to a new set of non-state actor...
The ubiquity of new media technologies in many parts of Africa today and the celebratory narratives ...
Over the past decade, Kenya's media landscape has witnessed a wave of transformative and disruptive ...
Social media platforms are being considered new podiums for political transformation as political di...
Before the US crackdown on WikiLeaks website from 2010, the narrative of freedom dominating discours...
Much has been written about the production and textual features of international media portrayals of...
Claims have been made that the advent of social media and its assumed ability to fuel social strife ...
In the past few years, Kenya’s digital landscape has transformed and this has been made possible by ...
The increase in access to affordable mobile technologies has created an interesting, sometimes compl...
This chapter examines how Kenya’s online community, commonly referred to as #KOT (Kenyans on Twitter...
AbstractThis study interrogates changes that have developed with the incorporation of digital techno...
This paper discusses the contribution of new media in Kenyan democratization process. The advent of ...
The role of information and communication technology (ICT) in development has been discussed from tw...
The article discusses the significance of the past in the planning of media policies in two neighbou...
Initial Information and Communication Technologies for Development (ICT4D) discourse embraced Inform...
The fast-growing Internet platform in Africa has given opportunities to a new set of non-state actor...
The ubiquity of new media technologies in many parts of Africa today and the celebratory narratives ...
Over the past decade, Kenya's media landscape has witnessed a wave of transformative and disruptive ...
Social media platforms are being considered new podiums for political transformation as political di...
Before the US crackdown on WikiLeaks website from 2010, the narrative of freedom dominating discours...
Much has been written about the production and textual features of international media portrayals of...
Claims have been made that the advent of social media and its assumed ability to fuel social strife ...
In the past few years, Kenya’s digital landscape has transformed and this has been made possible by ...
The increase in access to affordable mobile technologies has created an interesting, sometimes compl...
This chapter examines how Kenya’s online community, commonly referred to as #KOT (Kenyans on Twitter...
AbstractThis study interrogates changes that have developed with the incorporation of digital techno...
This paper discusses the contribution of new media in Kenyan democratization process. The advent of ...
The role of information and communication technology (ICT) in development has been discussed from tw...
The article discusses the significance of the past in the planning of media policies in two neighbou...
Initial Information and Communication Technologies for Development (ICT4D) discourse embraced Inform...
The fast-growing Internet platform in Africa has given opportunities to a new set of non-state actor...