Login (password reminder?):
islandmix.com register | Connect with Facebook | Support (login probs)

IslandMix - Soca, Reggae, Zouk and Caribbean Entertainment

Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread Display Modes  
Old 02-16-2007, 12:46 PM   #1 (permalink)
Registered User
 
VINCYPOWA's Avatar
VINCYPOWA is offline
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: America
Posts: 56,773
Credits: 140,801
The Misrepresentation Of Africa

The misrepresentation of Africa

Selome Araya (2007-02-14)

Africa continues to be misrepresented as a continent of victims of poverty, violence and ridden with HIV/AIDS. Selome Araya says campaigns such as "Save Darfur", the Red Campaign by GAP and the "I Am An African" AIDS campaign all contribute to the stereotyping of the continent as a place of despair.


Ask anyone what they think of “Africa” and you may receive a response related to poverty, AIDS, hunger, ‘tribalism’ or animals. Trails of pity might linger in their words as a hint of disgust shimmers in their eyes. They may give an example of how they helped to “Save Darfur” or dreamed of adopting an “African orphan”. Most likely the view of the continent is that it is not a continent at all, but one large country, where everyone speaks the same language, eats the same food, wears the same type of clothing, and creates the same type of art. Yes, in their eyes, “Africa” is a homogeneous place of simple people with simple activities.

But, for someone who has never been to the continent, can they be blamed for this ignorance? The media and “humanitarian” agencies do an incredible job of misrepresenting the birth of civilization and projecting it as a down-trodden place of mishaps and has-beens. A place of disease, poverty, and chaos, and a place devoid of any history or future. Even today, it is still depicted as “The Dark Continent”, with dark tales of gore and war. And it’s not just the media. So-called “experts”, practitioners, and scholars perpetuate these stereotypes to no end, continually feeding the misrepresentation engine.

This cynicism is not to be taken lightly. “Africa” has been placed at the bottom of every pole on the international scale. It is deemed as possibly one of the worst regions on earth, and this notion is perpetuated continually with images and language, misinformation and racism, and media blitz and negative attention. Very few media outlets provide their viewers and readers with positive information about the plethora of countries and events occurring on the continent. For that would be mundane and not “sexy”. Yes, it seems that “Africa” is sexy these days. A crisis in “Africa” gets more response, more money, and more attention than a positive occurrence.

Granted, there are many issues affecting numerous countries in Africa. But I’m appalled at the fact that every time I hear of this place my family and ancestors call home, it is in a negative light, in a pitiful light, in a savagery light, in a deadly light. What I fail to understand is how all other elements of life are negated for the sake of a “good story” and a dramatic plea for funds. I have seen with my own eyes many elements of life that are beautiful beyond explanation, and I beg someone to explain to me why these elements aren’t projected.

Recently I was skimming Elle Magazine (yes, clearly not a place to be reporting on affairs of an international nature) and was deeply disturbed by the only two pages dedicated to “Africa”. The article disturbed me so much that I had to write a letter to the Editor expressing my utter disgust at their depiction. Africa was [mis] represented as a place where everyone is dying, has AIDS, or who is thirsty and hungry. There was no context provided, nor was there any balance that spoke of the positive elements of the continent. There was no mention of how people are responding to their own needs. All that was discussed were ways in which Europeans are “saving” this dreadful place from falling further into its cave of darkness. I couldn’t help but wonder how many readers of this pretentious high-fashion magazine walked away with a haunting perception of a place that they have never been to. If I were reading about “Africa” for the first time, I surely would think of it as a place that is just a hot mess of hell.

As a graduate student at Columbia University, where so-called “experts” teach aspiring public health students about “Africa”, I experience the same generalizations and stereotypes being perpetuated. These “experts” have dedicated their lives to joining the “saviour” movement that’s happening in certain circles of humanitarian assistance. And so, “women” are all victims and need outsiders to help them do everything. “Child soldiers” need to be rehabilitated by people from European countries. “Women and children” need outsiders to intervene and “save” them from the heathens that are the men in their lives. Everyone is dying of some disease. Every home seems to be in a dilapidated state with no food, water, or electricity. Almost everybody is in need of a program designed from abroad. People don’t know (or remember how) to grow their own food, so they need continual food aid packets dropped in their “communities”. And everyone belongs to a “culture” and has traditional ways that they live their lives, in their villages.

“Health” must be shaped from a Western point of view. It sickens me to hear how excited they become as they talk about the next country they are travelling to, to implement their pre-designed projects on people. They are the Lords of Poverty and aren’t even conscious of the stereotypes they carry with them as they lecture. And they’re producing an entire pedigree. Many of the students make drastic generalizations and proclamations about the countries they have lived in (for three months) and become self-proclaimed spokespersons for this region of the world.

There are also many campaigns today that continue to project negative perceptions of Africa onto the world. For people who have no exposure, direct contact, or knowledge of Africa, these campaigns are down right dangerous and counter-productive. Instead of “raising awareness” about important causes, they invoke pity for “the other” and perpetuate the concept that Africa is backwards and in need of saving. The campaigns I am referring to are the “I am African” campaign, the “Red” campaign from The Gap clothing company, and the numerous “Save Darfur” campaigns occurring in the world. As I walked down the streets of Manhattan today, I retained some of the advertisement for the “Red” campaign at the Gap. It pleads for people to help end AIDS in Africa and to save women and children from dying. Again, another universal representation of Africa for all of the Gap Corporation consumers. The millions of Gap Corporation consumers.

The “I am African” campaign is one that may have good intentions, but is grossly offensive and appalling. Appalling because an African woman is behind it, offensive because of the feathers, face paint, and European superstars posing as “Africans”. So now we have Gwyneth Paltrow with striped paint on her cheek, a plethora of jewellery on her neck, with the phrase “I am African” across her chest. I understand the point is to educate people on the AIDS crisis on the continent, but could it not have been done in a more respectful, tactful, and tasteful manner? But more importantly, what these campaigns do is make “AIDS in Africa” a commodity, something that is fashionable and marketable, and makes the only reference people have to the continent one that is linked to death and poor health. To have celebrities (who are not of African descent) say that they are “African” is to imply that since they are now “African” they also somehow have AIDS. It’s sending a message that being African is synonymous with AIDS.

International Non-Governmental Organizations who do business in “Africa” are no better. They spend much of their time and resources depicting the continent as a place that only they can “fix”, and spew out endless facts to justify their own causes. Yes, they are there to save the lowly Africans, and the more dramatic the picture or story, the more support they receive. And more importantly, the longer they stay in business. What people fail to understand is that, while it is imperative to raise awareness about the global poverty that is the reality for billions of people around the world, it is not helpful in the least to project an entire continent through a one-dimensional lens that is lined with despair and imbalance.

If people are going to campaign and discuss such despair, they need to provide context and background information, and underlying root causes of issues like AIDS and other poverty-related concerns. To simply present them independent of any other information is to represent people as helpless, hopeless victims who need saving. It is time for a change. It is time for “Africa” to be uplifted more often in the media. We need to hear more about the other dimensions of life for “Africans”; those that are not living in abject poverty and dying every second from whichever health concern is “hot” at the moment.

There’s music, there’s movement, there’s knowledge, there’s progress, there’s love, there’s tradition, there’s strength, there’s beauty, there’s nature, there’s power, there’s wealth, there’s health, there’s humanity, there’s history, there’s unity, there’s peace, there‘s LIFE. Sometimes, wouldn’t it be great to hear about these elements too? Because the “Africa” that I know is much more than death.

* Selome Araya is a community activist and freelance writer who is currently finishing her Master's degree in Forced Migration and Health.
  Reply With Quote  
Old 02-16-2007, 12:54 PM   #2 (permalink)
Mr. BALTIMORE
 
Redlocks's Avatar
Redlocks is offline
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Baltimore
Posts: 3,416
Credits: 8,063
There are a lot of miconceptions about Africa. I remember
going on a date with a girl and deciding she was too much of
a lost cause due to her ignorance. She tried to argue that
Africa wasn't a continent, but it was a country.
  Reply With Quote  
Sponsored Links
Old 02-16-2007, 08:13 PM   #3 (permalink)
I'm on the Rock
 
Bago20's Avatar
Bago20 is offline
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Brooklyn,NY
Posts: 5,832
Credits: 5,942
Originally Posted by Redlocks View Post
There are a lot of miconceptions about Africa. I remember
going on a date with a girl and deciding she was too much of
a lost cause due to her ignorance. She tried to argue that
Africa wasn't a continent, but it was a country.
LOL... If a female told me that AFRICA is a country and not a continent, is one big U turn i making to head to White Castle instead of Red Lobster.....
__________________
STAG, goat and rice.

I'm good.

http://www.islandmix.com/gallery/showgallery.php?cat=3345

http://www.islandmix.com/gallery/showgallery.php?cat=500&page=2&ppuser=25586
  Reply With Quote  
Old 02-16-2007, 10:53 PM   #4 (permalink)
Salsero de pura cepa
 
Otorongo's Avatar
Otorongo is offline
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Atlanta, GA
Posts: 10,473
Credits: 713
Originally Posted by oevega
Well,

Africa is at the bottom, isn't?

People is dying in mass from HIV, hunger and other disseases, and the life expectancy is down to 40 years. While population growth is out of control. It is the continent with the largest percentage of analphabets in the world. Infrastructure is minimal, violence is rampant, problems are infinite.

While the rest of the world has progressed in the last 40 years, Africa is the only place where things go backwards.

Is that just a "perception"?

I am afraid that's the reality. Calling it just a "perception" is just forgetting people of Africa, I believe.

Africa can be a beutiful continent but that has anything to do. Rural China is beautiful, Japan Fuji is beautiful, Northern Canada is beautiful, and South America is not only beautiful but outstanding. That has anything to do with developent and people's quality of life. Haiti is a tropical paradyse but anyone volunteer to live there?


Omar
The point you are missing Omar is that Africa is not one nation with one trend.
Recent Economic Trends in Africa and Prospects for 20061
Africa Competitiveness Report
I believe I schooled you on this before.
Originally Posted by Salsassin
Your racism is showing Omar. So are you insinuating Black people can't have stable governments? Or that HIV is rampant in all of Africa?

" Unlike many of its African counterparts, Botswana has managed to shrewdly take advantage of its vast mineral wealth and transform itself from one of the world’s poorest nations to a middle-income economic success story in less than 3 decades ( 2001 per capita GDP of $7,800). "

" All these honors are a testament to Botswana’s commitment to promote free enterprise, free markets, and minimal state interference in business. The country is dedicated to a policy of economic growth through endorsing entrepreneurship, investment and free trade. Botswana has become an increasingly attractive investment for both direct projects and portfolio flows for several reasons. "

http://www.global.ucsb.edu/alumni/botswana.htm

Africa is not a country. Education varies by region, country, culture and social class. Africans in England have the highest level of Academians per capita in that country. In the USA Africans have more kids in college per capita than Afro-Americans Hardly an indication of lack of intelligence or education.

On HIV
http://www.who.int/entity/hiv/AFRO2005.pdf
http://www.un.org/esa/population/pub..._WHOPaper2.pdf

The USA HIV positive population is 0.33% of the population. .6% of the adult population. In Chile it is .3% of the populations There are some African countries that beat that statistic.

* HIV prevalence statistics as percent of population in various countries:
o 2% of adult population in Somalia (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 2% of adult population in Gambia (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 20% of adult population in South Africa (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 20% of adult population in Zambia (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 37.5% of adult population in Botswana (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 31.5% of adult population in Lesotho (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 38.6% of adult population in Swaziland (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 33.7% of adult population in Zimbabwe (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 12.9% of adult population in Central African Republic (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 9.7% of adult population in Cote d’Ivoire (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 5.8% of adult population in Nigeria (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 15% of adult population in Kenya (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
o 5% of adult population in Uganda (AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS, 2003)
* Prevalence of AIDS as percent of population by country world-wide:
o 0.1% of adult population have AIDS in Algeria 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 5.5% of adult population have AIDS in Angola 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 3.6% of adult population have AIDS in Benin 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 38.8% of adult population have AIDS in Botswana 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 6.5% of adult population have AIDS in Burkina Faso 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 8.3% of adult population have AIDS in Burundi 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 11.8% of adult population have AIDS in Cameroon 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 0.04% of adult population have AIDS in Cape Verde 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 12.9% of adult population have AIDS in Central African Republic 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 0.12% of adult population have AIDS in Comoros 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 4.9% of adult population have AIDS in Democratic Republic of the Congo 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 7.2% of adult population have AIDS in The Republic of the Congo 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 9.7% of adult population have AIDS in Cote d’Ivoire 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 11.75% of adult population have AIDS in Djibouti 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o Less than 0.1% of adult population have AIDS in Egypt 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 3.4% of adult population have AIDS in Equatorial Guinea 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 2.8% of adult population have AIDS in Eritrea 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 6.4% of adult population have AIDS in Ethiopia 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 9% of adult population have AIDS in Gabon 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 1.6% of adult population have AIDS in The Gambia 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 3% of adult population have AIDS in Ghana 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 1.54% of adult population have AIDS in Guinea 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 10% of adult population have AIDS in Guinea-Bissau 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 15% of adult population have AIDS in Kenya 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 31% of adult population have AIDS in Lesotho 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 9% of adult population have AIDS in Liberia 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 0.2% of adult population have AIDS in Libya 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 12% of adult population have AIDS in Malawi 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 22.5% of adult population have AIDS in Namibia 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 13% of adult population have AIDS in Mozambique 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 5.8% of adult population have AIDS in Nigeria 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 8.9% of adult population have AIDS in Rwanda 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 7% of adult population have AIDS in Sierre Leone 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 1% of adult population have AIDS in Somalia 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 20.1% of adult population have AIDS in South Africa 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 2.6% of adult population have AIDS in Sudan 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 33.4% of adult population have AIDS in Swaziland 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 7.8% of adult population have AIDS in Tanzania 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 6% of population have AIDS in Togo 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 5% of adult population have AIDS in Uganda 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 0.6% of adult population have AIDS in United States 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 21.5% of adult population have AIDS in Zambia 2001 (CIA, 2004)
o 33.7% of adult population have AIDS in Zimbabwe 2001 (CIA, 2004)


Need to educate yourself.
http://www.backintyme.com/odr/viewto...?p=19138#19138

Some losers never learn.
  Reply With Quote  
Old 02-17-2007, 02:36 PM   #5 (permalink)
Registered User
 
VINCYPOWA's Avatar
VINCYPOWA is offline
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: America
Posts: 56,773
Credits: 140,801
Originally Posted by Bago20 View Post
LOL... If a female told me that AFRICA is a country and not a continent, is one big U turn i making to head to White Castle instead of Red Lobster.....
  Reply With Quote  
Old 02-17-2007, 02:52 PM   #6 (permalink)
DSP
Registered User
 
DSP's Avatar
DSP is offline
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Qaarada
Posts: 2,333
Credits: 1,125
No western country should send any aid packages food, money, weapons, or drugs to any country in Africa. While they cut that off they shouldn't mine for resources their either. Let them cut off contact altogether. I'd be happy with that. I'd be happy living home just like that. People who emphasizie this negativity don't really bother me, what bothers me is why do they even talk about it. Like these low lifes get some kind of entertainment value or cheap thrill out of it.
  Reply With Quote  
Old 02-17-2007, 02:55 PM   #7 (permalink)
Salsero de pura cepa
 
Otorongo's Avatar
Otorongo is offline
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Atlanta, GA
Posts: 10,473
Credits: 713
Originally Posted by DSP View Post
No western country should send any aid packages food, money, weapons, or drugs to any country in Africa. While they cut that off they shouldn't mine for resources their either. Let them cut off contact altogether. I'd be happy with that. I'd be happy living home just like that. People who emphasizie this negativity don't really bother me, what bothers me is why do they even talk about it. Like these low lifes get some kind of entertainment value or cheap thrill out of it.
It's easy to say when you are healthy. But the family that has their children dying might say differently.
  Reply With Quote  
Old 02-17-2007, 04:19 PM   #8 (permalink)
Mr. BALTIMORE
 
Redlocks's Avatar
Redlocks is offline
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Baltimore
Posts: 3,416
Credits: 8,063
Originally Posted by Bago20 View Post
LOL... If a female told me that AFRICA is a country and not a continent, is one big U turn i making to head to White Castle instead of Red Lobster.....
My litmus test is to determine how comfortable a woman is
with other cultures and traveling. Girls that are comfortable
with camping will always score higher than those that require
all-inclusive resorts. If she hadn't been so opinionated to begin
with, I would have chosen to educate her. Instead I never
called her again.
  Reply With Quote  
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread: