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The News Posters of South Africa By
Neil Henry JOHANNESBURG,
South Africa — Like all democracies, new South Africa depends on a free press
to inform the public and maintain a vigilant eye on the workings of
government. In this cause the nation boasts several weekly newspapers and a
host of dailies appealing to various sectors of South Africa's diverse
population of 42.8 million, from the populist Sowetan and Citizen, and highbrow
Independent and Mail and Guardian, to the Afrikaans-language Beeld. This
lively array of press voices is reflected nearly everywhere in Johannesburg
and other cities in the form of news posters like these, literally thousands
of them, proclaiming the news of the day. The poster tradition is rooted in
the tabloid newspaper culture of Fleet Street in London — indeed, it was
transplanted to South Africa during the days of Empire — but conveys a
distinctly African flavour. The
posters are changed daily and set in city-owned racks which adorn lampposts,
telephone standards and signposts throughout the nation. Marketing
representatives at South Africa's dailies say a "grabber" story or
headline which well commands the attention of commuters can boost circulation
by as much as 10 percent. One
thing is sure: the posters are never dull, and in many ways embody the finest
tradition and highest aims of a free press. In a society still struggling to
emerge from the oppressive years of apartheid and press censorship, such
posters seem to offer one small measure of the nation's promise of free
expression and a just future. |