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For decades, the communication and media theories used to explain concepts, constructs, and themes connected to local Nigerian contexts have emerged from the West. But these Western theories often fail to properly convey insights to local issues in communication and media in Nigeria and Africa. Recently, there have been calls to view African nations as sources of refined communication and media knowledge. African communication and media scholars, both established and emerging, have thus increasingly interrogated the applicability of Western communication and media theories to indigenous…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
For decades, the communication and media theories used to explain concepts, constructs, and themes connected to local Nigerian contexts have emerged from the West. But these Western theories often fail to properly convey insights to local issues in communication and media in Nigeria and Africa. Recently, there have been calls to view African nations as sources of refined communication and media knowledge. African communication and media scholars, both established and emerging, have thus increasingly interrogated the applicability of Western communication and media theories to indigenous African contexts.

This climatic volume showcases a historical overview of Nigerian communication and media theoretical perspectives from experiences which are often complex and complicated. By moving away from a Western axiology and epistemology, this book domesticates, reformulates, and repositions the field to better reflect the cultural and communicative nuances of Nigerian experiences.
Autorenporträt
Dr. Unwana Samuel Akpan lectures at the Department of Mass Communication, University of Lagos, Nigeria. He is the author/editor of the first comprehensive book to systematically propound a distinct set of Nigerian indigenous communication and media theories that authentically root their framework directly in the nation's rich cultural traditions.