Mimicking power: visualizing satire as journalism in Zimbabwe Cover Image

Mimicking power: visualizing satire as journalism in Zimbabwe
Mimicking power: visualizing satire as journalism in Zimbabwe

Author(s): Florence Zivaishe Madenga
Subject(s): Visual Arts, Communication studies
Published by: Krakowskie Towarzystwo Popularyzowania Wiedzy o Komunikacji Językowej Tertium
Keywords: satire; mimicry; journalism; YouTube; Zimbabwe

Summary/Abstract: Thisarticleexplores performances of satire as a form of journalism in Zimbabwe by analysingperformances by satirists who mimic to mock journalistic conventionsand political authorities. Through analyses of YouTube videos, the article explores the ways in which satire as journalism is visualised. Onscreen, satirists mimic the gestures, mannerisms and aesthetic objects connected to both political figures and state journalists on the state-run television station for ridicule. This paper argues that the parodying and mimicking of aesthetics of authority legitimises and professionalises satire as journalism, even as it seeks to critique notions of journalistic authority in an authoritarian state.Through analyses of three Zimbabwean satire showson YouTube, the paper finds that,while satirists mimic journalistic practices and journalistic authority with the goal of mocking state media and the censorial state, a closer reading of their practices shows that they themselves become legitimate news tellers. This kind of satire plays with familiar broadcasting television aesthetics to signal authority, providing current news and otherwise censored critique.

  • Issue Year: 12/2024
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 9-35
  • Page Count: 27
  • Language: English
Toggle Accessibility Mode