Spotlight

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Never in history has it been so easy to accumulate information. A vast sea of stories flows ceaselessly through the devices at our fingertips. But some days I feel I am drowning in data that does not help me understand the world any better.

Edward R Murrow’s warning about TV in 1958 could just as well be applied to all our modern information sources:

“This instrument can teach. It can illuminate and, yes, it can even inspire. But it can do so only to the extent that humans are determined to use it towards those ends. Otherwise, it is merely wires and lights in a box.”

It is what we do with the information at our disposal that determines our destiny.

I once had a news editor when I worked on a small broadsheet newspaper in Cape Town who would cut me down to size by reminding me that my feverish efforts at storytelling would soon be “fish n’chips wrapper”. Undeterred I sat at my Olivetti typewriter for hours until I was happy with the stories.

In 2014 when we launched The Journalist we had a section called News. Our aim was and is to explore the meaning behind the lights and wires. To avoid at all costs becoming electronic ‘fish n’chips wrapper’.

Since then, we have chosen to rework this section of our website and in line with our updated approach it is called SPOTLIGHT. It is a name that evokes images of performers plucked out of the darkness of the stage and bathed in light so that the audience can revel in their artistry.

Spotlight will feature the artistry of our finest writers. Their brief will be simple. Don’t merely tell us what happened. Help us understand why.

If you have an idea for a Spotlight story please engage in the discussion or use the Contact Us page to write and let us know what you are thinking.

If we are indeed the end result of all the stories we’ve heard, as Tim Knight says, choose carefully. The Journalist is committed to help you make that choice and to shed light on the 21st Century clutter.

Unravelling the fabric of the industry: South Africa’s Clothing and Textile Business

Unravelling the fabric of the industry: South Africa’s Clothing and Textile Business

Ebrahim Patel The story of the clothing industry is one of a sector that was shedding tens of thousands of jobs a year through the late 1990s, but has recently started to create new jobs. Before the transition to democracy, the sector employed roughly 250 000. It was supported by very high tariffs that kept foreign goods out, very low wages that kept costs down, and substantial financial subsidies that kept businesses alive, particularly in the old homelands areas. Yet these features were not...

Jansen is leaving UFS with ‘mixed emotions’

Jansen is leaving UFS with ‘mixed emotions’

Prof Jonathan Jansen spoke to The Journalist about stepping down as Vice-Chancellor and Rector of the University of the Free State (UFS). A statement released yesterday, by Council Chairperson, Judge Ian van der Merwe, announced that Jansen, who has been with the university since 1 July 2009, will be taking up an invitation as a Fellow at the Centre for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University in the USA later this year. His term at the UFS will come to an end in...

Freedom Day: The good, the bad and the invisible

Freedom Day: The good, the bad and the invisible

As we celebrate Freedom Day, our heads are filled with thoughts about the past, the present and the future. The writer argues that as South Africans we should celebrate our achievements as much as we battle our demons. Today we celebrate our 22nd Freedom Day since the system of apartheid was stopped in its tracks. […]

We have a WINNER on Freedom Day

We have a WINNER on Freedom Day

Congratulations to Martin Mulcahy (Cape Town) for winning the Sol Plaatje competition. He walks away with a Vodafone Smart Ultra 6 from Vodacom. It’s Freedom Day and The Journalist is celebrating the 100th anniversary of Sol Plaatje’s classic Native Life in South Africa. This remarkable book has stood the test of time and should be required reading for journalism students and all thoughtful South Africans and Africans. Well done to Martin Mulcahy for being our Freedom Day winner, and Salomè...

UHURU Now: The Trouble with ‘Transformation’

UHURU Now: The Trouble with ‘Transformation’

Emma Pottinger UHURU NOW: what is to be done at our universities is a series of conversations by academics, thought-leaders and debaters, which seeks to archive contemporary dialogue on transformation and decolonisation at higher education institutions. The series aims to shift the discourse, introduce fresh ways of thinking and provide meaningful debate on issues around […]

Jacob Zuma, The Trickster

Jacob Zuma, The Trickster

Using a well-known folktale, Rhodes University History lecturer, Naledi Nomalanga Mkhize, addresses the recent Con Court ruling, Jacob Zuma’s giggle and cannabalism. uChakide, the trickster mongoose, was hungry. So he convinced uGogo Granny, to play ‘I cook you, you cook me’ in the pots over the fire. Naturally, Chakide went first into the pot and gogo lit the fire. Once it became a tad hot, Chakide called out from inside the pot “Tshiyo tshiyo sengivuthiwe!” (“I’m cooked enough now!”). Gogo...

After Monday’s event at Wits we know the student movement has been deeply fractured

After Monday’s event at Wits we know the student movement has been deeply fractured

In the confusion of an attempted campus shutdown at Wits last Monday 4 April, the national student movement suffered a severe fragmentation. And it’s not like the movements across campuses this year have been a testimony to unity anyway. AAISHA DADI PATEL rounds up. A protest at Wits University on Monday 4 April did not outline any specific demands, and many students – including those involved in the movement – questioned its legitimacy, after it came to light that secret and closed meetings...

Civil Society calls for South Africans to mobilise on Freedom Day

Civil Society calls for South Africans to mobilise on Freedom Day

A group of civil society leaders are urging South Africans to make Freedom Day a ‘day of action’ by urging President Jacob Zuma to step down. The group, including political leaders, religious leaders and members of the judiciary are calling on South Africans to mobilise on April 27 to demand Zuma’s resignation, with talks and discussions kicking off this weekend. ANC stalwarts, civil society organisations and religious leaders are calling for mass action to recall President Jacob Zuma. The...

ANC’s failure to do the right thing has left South Africa at an impasse

ANC’s failure to do the right thing has left South Africa at an impasse

What would it take for President Jacob Zuma and the African National Congress (ANC) to understand that South Africa is a constitutional democracy, and provide desperately needed leadership to protect this fundamental principle? Asks Professor of Public Affairs at Tshwane University of Technology, Mashupye Herbert Maserumule. President Zuma’s apology and the ANC’s acceptance and defence of it are missed opportunities to reclaim credibility and the moral high ground. They follow the...

South Africa’s governing ANC buys itself time as the unravelling begins

South Africa’s governing ANC buys itself time as the unravelling begins

Following damning revelations by senior ANC figures that they had been offered jobs by the Gupta family, as well as reports that the President's son, Duduzane Zuma, has benefited financially from close ties to the politically-connected family, the Guptas’ influence on the ANC government is being called into question; urging the leading party to respond to the public outcry about state capture, ahead of local elections later this year. This article originally appeared on The Conversation. Even...

Viva Wayde van Niekerk

Viva Wayde van Niekerk

We at The Journalist wish to salute former Capetonian and student at the University of Free State Wayde van Niekerk for his astonishing achievements on the athletic tracks of the world. This young man has become the first person in history to run the 400m in under 44s, the 200m in under 20s and a sub 10s run for the 100m. This is an extraordinary achievement for Wayde that does his family, community and country proud. Wayde is the current world 800m champion. In our main edition for the month,...

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The Journalist is a ground-breaking media project that provides history and context for key issues facing South African journalists. The Journalist is an independent, not for profit organisation working with the academic community and a range of credible online entities to make knowledge more accessible to the wider public. We don’t only tell you what happened. We help you understand why.

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