They were people, loved ones with names
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.
They were people, loved ones with names
Youth making sense of decades of history
“Complex problems require innovative younger leadership who have boundless energy.”
Shipwreck found where hundreds drowned
But why does everyone hate Monsanto & does it really matter?
An Africa Day Celebration
Tributes pouring in for “The Muckraker”
Nuruddin Farah, one of the greatest writers alive today
Why British elections are important in Africa
Talent can’t be contained within borders
Movement divided along many lines
A long, hard look at Cecil John Rhodes
Rhodes the founding father of apartheid
The Journalist’s Publisher Setting the record straight
The UN & Google Join Forces
A Kenyan journalist reflects on exile in Joburg & Xenophobia
A garden party brought back to reality
Saleem Badat looks “behind and beyond the everyday”
A Student Leader takes Linda Fekisi behind the scenes of the protests making headlines
Washing the blood off the walls of a place of learning
Singing a Sonia Herold song to Freedom Front leader
An “exhausting, painful, exhilarating” soul searching session
Much, much more than a music festival
Linda Fekisi Explores Molo Songolo
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.
We want our stories spread far and wide. Feel free to republish our articles, but please credit our writers and authors and credit The Journalist at the top or bottom of the article complete with a hyperlink back to the site.
The Journalist is a non-profit organisation and relies on public funding. Please consider donating to ensure more issues in the future.
Account name: The Journalist / Bank: Standard Bank
Branch Code: 026209 / Account number: 270320830