Drama and Orality in Kenya’s Radio Advertising.
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Date
2016-10-20
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Chuka University
Abstract
The relationship between drama, cultural practice and electronic media in Kenya is built around a
history of intricate relationships informed by history, aesthetics and values adored by the African people
since time immemorial. By function, drama has always addressed cultural, historical and emerging
themes. For quite some time now, it has become a very fashionable technique of advertisement
production in Kenya, yet research on drama as a persuasive genre remains scant. This paper examines
the relationship between advertisement drama in radio and indigenous literary practices of the African
people. It is based on the assumption that since the purpose of advertisements is to influence mass
buyers, the choice of drama genre by advertisers imply that it possesses unique persuasive elements that
can render for scholarly analyses. Since radio is a purely oral-acoustic medium just like primary orality,
elements of primary oral cultures serve to enhance the expressiveness of radio-mediated advertisements.
The paper begins from awareness that drama has always been a cultural production in Kenya, and that
indigenous literary forms have always punctuated dramatic experience at every phase of its
development both in content and style. Using a qualitative design, data is in the form of audio recordings
of advertisements that use the technique of drama in radio. These are transcribed, translated and
analyzed to arrive at conclusions about the persuasive strategy of theatre in the radio medium. Walter
Ong’s theorizing about transiting from primary orality to typographical forms will enable us understand
the psychodynamics of how audio messages are crafted to resonate with those who hear them. Ong’s
ideas about the notion of ‘imagined audiences’ will also be used. These ideas enable us examine how
advertisers imagine their audiences via virtual experience. It is expected that aspects of indigenous
literary forms will manifest, and that these elements have rhetorically latent. It is also expected that the
language in theatrical ads will be uniquely fashioned to persuade, and that these adverts will reveal how
their consumers understand the world around them.
Description
Article
Keywords
Orality, Drama, Persuasion, Narrative structure, Advertising.
Citation
Njogu, J.G. (2017). Drama and Orality in Kenya’s Radio Advertising. In: Isutsa, D.K. and Githae, E.W. Proceedings of the Third Chuka University International Research Conference held in Chuka University, Chuka, Kenya from 26th to 28th October, 2016. 304 to 314 pp.