SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.41Processos de Marginalização Étnica e Cultural na África Pós-Colonial. O Caso dos Amakhuwa de Moçambique(Des)Colonialidade Linguística e Interculturalidade nas Duas Principais Rotas da Mobilidade Estudantil Brasileira índice de autoresíndice de assuntosPesquisa de artigos
Home Pagelista alfabética de periódicos  

Serviços Personalizados

Journal

Artigo

Indicadores

Links relacionados

  • Não possue artigos similaresSimilares em SciELO

Compartilhar


Comunicação e Sociedade

versão impressa ISSN 1645-2089versão On-line ISSN 2183-3575

Resumo

DALVIT, Lorenzo. A Decolonial Perspective on Online Media Discourses in the Context of Violence Against People With Disabilities in South Africa. Comunicação e Sociedade [online]. 2022, vol.41, pp.169-187.  Epub 22-Jun-2022. ISSN 1645-2089.  https://doi.org/10.17231/comsoc.41(2022).3722.

As one of the most violent and unequal societies globally, South Africa is still profoundly shaped by a legacy of segregation and oppression. While race, gender and socio-economic status receive much attention, (dis)ability is an important yet often neglected dimension of inequality. In this article, I adopt a decolonial perspective in discussing online media articles about violence against people with disabilities. By focusing on stories related to issues that received extensive media coverage (e.g. mental health, police brutality and gender-based violence), I problematise the Eurocentric human-rights discourse informing public and scholarly discussions. I also explore the link between current understandings of (dis)ability and the legacy of a violent colonial and apartheid past. As a result of the intersectional nature of (dis)ability, many of the stories involve multiple layers of inequality and different forms of oppression. An explicit focus on extreme forms of institutional and physical violence, while restricting the scope of enquiry, brings the brutality of western modernity and its effects on the people affected into sharp focus. Legal recurse appears to lead to incomplete reparation at best while its failures perpetuate a cycle of marginalisation and oppression. Rather than problematising these structural failures as a result of western modernity and neoliberalism, the media inadvertently obfuscates such links by performing its normative, that is, by identifying and exposing individual culprits or by blaming contextual factors.

Palavras-chave : disability; online discourses; violence; decolonial; South Africa.

        · resumo em Português     · texto em Português | Inglês     · Português ( pdf ) | Inglês ( pdf )