Accounting for youth audiences' resistances to HIV and AIDS messages in the television drama Tsha Tsha in South Africa

Theoretical debates and literature on E-E efforts in Africa have largely focussed on understanding how and why interventions on HIV and AIDS are effective in influencing behaviour change among target communities. Very few studies have sought to investigate and understand why a substantial number of...

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Main Authors: Blessing Makwambeni (Author), Abiodun Salawu (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Taylor & Francis Group, 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z.
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100 1 0 |a Blessing Makwambeni  |e author 
700 1 0 |a Abiodun Salawu  |e author 
245 0 0 |a Accounting for youth audiences' resistances to HIV and AIDS messages in the television drama Tsha Tsha in South Africa 
260 |b Taylor & Francis Group,   |c 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z. 
500 |a 1729-0376 
500 |a 1813-4424 
500 |a 10.1080/17290376.2018.1444506 
520 |a Theoretical debates and literature on E-E efforts in Africa have largely focussed on understanding how and why interventions on HIV and AIDS are effective in influencing behaviour change among target communities. Very few studies have sought to investigate and understand why a substantial number of targeted audiences resist the preferred readings that are encoded into E-E interventions on HIV and AIDS. Using cultural studies as its conceptual framework and reception analysis as its methodology, this study investigated and accounted for the oppositional readings that subaltern black South African youths negotiate from Tsha Tsha, an E-E television drama on HIV and AIDS in South Africa. Results from the study show that HIV and AIDS messages in Tsha Tsha face substantial resistances from situated youth viewers whose social contexts of consumption, shared identities, quotidian experiences and subjectivities, provide critical lines along which the E-E text is often resisted and inflected. These findings do not only hold several implications for E-E practice and research, they further reflect the utility of articulating cultural studies and reception analysis into a more nuanced theoretical and methodological framework for evaluating the 'impact' of E-E interventions on HIV and AIDS. 
546 |a EN 
690 |a audience reception 
690 |a cultural studies 
690 |a entertainment-education 
690 |a HIV and AIDS 
690 |a Public aspects of medicine 
690 |a RA1-1270 
655 7 |a article  |2 local 
786 0 |n SAHARA-J, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 20-30 (2018) 
787 0 |n http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17290376.2018.1444506 
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787 0 |n https://doaj.org/toc/1813-4424 
856 4 1 |u https://doaj.org/article/c159ac9921214494b71241e807a1e0ab  |z Connect to this object online.