Communication and Electoral Politics in Ghana

Communication and Electoral Politics in Ghana: Interrogating Transnational Technology, Discourse and Multimodalities

Edited by Eliasu Mumuni, Mark Nartey, Ruby Pappoe, Nancy Henaku, and G. Edzordzi Agbozo

Communication and Electoral Politics in Ghana: Interrogating Transnational Technology, Discourse and Multimodalities explores issues at the intersection of communication and African electoral politics, taking Ghana’s 2020 general election as a focus of investigation. This interdisciplinary volume redresses gaps in the literature by highlighting the relevance of language and communication to electoral politics in Sub-Saharan Africa during the period of a global pandemic. The collection accounts for local influences on election discourse and illustrates how the specific context within which such discourse is enacted informs the linguistic, multimodal and technological choices of sociopolitical actors. The non-Western perspective it adopts extends work on political communication in a context underexplored in the literature and contributes to ongoing critical conversations on the decolonial and postcolonial aspects of communication studies. 

Drawing on a variety of data, including political speeches, political cartoons, election campaigns and social media posts, the volume not only addresses the dearth of scholarly work on African political communication but also demonstrates the complexity of such scholarship and its importance to a comprehensive understanding of contemporary research on language and politics.

Furthermore, this publication enriches academic and public discussions on the future of democracy across the globe from a linguistic or communication perspective, expands scholarly work on African rhetoric and underscores the importance of engaging with diverse knowledge systems, especially non-Western epistemologies.

It can be obtained in Hardcover and eBook (EPUB and PDF) versions. 

Eliasu Mumuni is a Senior Lecturer and the Head of the Department for Communication, Innovation and Technology at the University for Development Studies, Ghana. He is also a Fulbright Scholar at the Appalachian State University and a member of IAMCR.

Mark Nartey is a Lecturer in English Language and Linguistics at the University of the West of England.

Ruby Pappoe is a Teaching Assistant Professor in Technical Writing at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Nancy Henaku is a Lecturer at the Department of English, University of Ghana.

G. Edzordzi Agbozo is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of North Carolina Wilmington.

The above text is from the publisher’s description of the book:

Title: Communication and Electoral Politics in Ghana: Interrogating Transnational Technology, Discourse and Multimodalities
Editors: Eliasu Mumuni, Mark Nartey, Ruby Pappoe, Nancy Henaku, and G. Edzordzi Agbozo
Published: 2024
Pages: 187
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Cham

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