The Public Sphere, The Media and Democracy

AUTHOR
Alison Gillwald
YEAR
1993
ANNOTATION

Gillwald examines the public sphere, contextualising it in terms of the debate between the liberalist school of thought and the Marxist school of thought. While the traditional liberalist position that locates the media “at the interface between the governors and governed”, the Marxist school characterises the media as bourgeoisie. Gillwald in elucidating on the shortcomings of both these notions, seeks to understand the public sphere in the sense of Habermas’ critical sphere. Through the debunking of certain misplaced assumptions with regard to the public sphere, she seeks to reconstruct the public sphere, thereby redefining the role of the media in a democracy.

OPEN ACCESS
On
LANGUAGE
English
LINKED CONTENT AREA
MEDIA TYPE
SUGGESTED CITATION

Alison Gillwald. "The Public Sphere, The Media and Democracy." Transformation: Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa 21 (1993): 65-77. https://muse.jhu.edu/