Emancipatory Journalism w Dr. Hemant Shah

The idea of “development journalism,” central to many discussions of mass communication and development in the Third World, needs to be reconceptualized because deliberations about its validity and usefulness have been bogged down in arguments structured by Western notions of press freedom. The debate has diverted attention from important questions about how journalism can contribute…

Read more

#WeChargeColonialism: Internal, Domestic, 21st Century

A discussion of colonialism with Afrikan Esquire TV and We Charge Colonialism. More information: Website: AfrikanEsquireTV.com WeChargeColonialism Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5Ik… Donate: https://www.gofundme.com/manage/afrik… Twitter: https://twitter.com/BeautBlackMind Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AfrikanEsqui… Email: AfrikanEsq@gmail.com BlackJunction.tv: https://blackjunction.tv/@AfrikanEsq FAL Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ12… FAL Facebook: https://www.youtube.com/redirect?even… FAL Pan-Afrikanist Library: http://fallibrary.teachable.com powered by Crowdcast

Read more

The Revolution will not be Televised-it will be Remixed! Hip Hop Colonialism versus Emancipatory (Mixtape) Journalism a Review by Lawrence Grandpre

… Morgan State University professor Jared Ball in his new book I Mix What I Like! A Mixtape Manifesto… [offers] a penetrating look at the way Black culture has become a commodity to be exploited for profit and a tool for the control of the brown masses, as corporate interest promote the vapid and tacitly…

Read more

I Mix What I Like! A Mixtape Manifesto (NOW FREE!)

i MiX What i Like! is titled as an homage to the collection of articles, I Write What I Like, written under the pseudonym “Frank Talk” by Stephen Bantu Biko. Just as Biko sought to use his brand of alternative journalism to encourage a Black Consciousness among his South African audience—a consciousness meant to inspire…

Read more