Interactive programmes on private radio stations in Ghana: An avenue for impoliteness
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of African Media Studies
Abstract
This study aims to show the impoliteness strategies employed during some radio
interactions. The data used here are mainly recordings of the morning shows of
some private radio stations in Ghana. We establish that all the recorded utterances
have some features that correspond with at least one of Culpeper’s (1996, 2005)
impoliteness strategies, which are bald-on-record impoliteness, positive impoliteness,
negative impoliteness, off-record impoliteness, and withhold politeness. However,
many of the participants prefer the use of the on-record strategies to the off-record strategies of impoliteness. We, therefore, assert that many participants in
interactive radio programs in Ghana prefer to convey messages to their addressees in a more direct and unrestrained manner, with little or no attention to their
(addressees’) face needs. These participants attack the faces of more powerful people
not only to demean their social status but also to demand quicker results and gain
some psychological relief.
Description
Research Article