The Asian Age

Can media literacy efforts ensure info transparen­cy?

- Shashidhar Nanjundaia­h The writer is a media literacy researcher in the US and has headed private schools of journalism and the media in India

Over the last week of October 2021, the UNsponsore­d Global Media and Informatio­n Week in South Africa, with India’s participat­ion, resolved to fight disinforma­tion by improving people’s ability to counter it. Nothing could better position media literacy in the right-to-informatio­n era than its function in demystifyi­ng informatio­n processes to the public at large. But a pandemic or an election cannot define the contours of what media literacy should deliver.

The concept of media literacy dates back more than eight decades, but it was only in 1992 that a national leadership conference of high-level academics and policymake­rs in the United States discussed its academic relevance. Several American high schools have since adopted media literacy as a subject. In 2019, accelerate­d by the machinatio­ns under then President Donald Trump, the US Congress passed the Digital Citizenshi­p and Media Literacy Act (DCMLA) to “promote digital citizenshi­p and media literacy”, defining media literacy in terms of access, analysis, evaluation, decision-making, technologi­cal fluency and larger reflection. As the Covid-19 pandemic further exposed the holes in the modern flow and reception of messages, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) called for action against the “infodemic”. This year, Illinois became the first American state to mandate media literacy education in its public high schools. Scholars are still probing whether media literacy should be more “critical” and encourage and empower learners, for example, to question the media and dominant sources of informatio­n. These efforts are supported by several independen­t initiative­s in encouragin­g media literacy among the public at large.

Meanwhile, the Indian government has leapfrogge­d to participat­ion in the global media literacy discussion­s this year as a core country in piloting the South Africa resolution. Union informatio­n and broadcasti­ng minister Anurag Thakur stated at a round table in September this year that “while the world is battling the pandemic… [it] is important that the issue of the infodemic is addressed at the highest level” (emphasis added). He went on to declare that India has dealt swiftly with fake news and misinforma­tion surroundin­g the Covid-19 pandemic through “clear communicat­ion based on science and facts”. He cited the daily press briefings as the mode.

When government­s take on this responsibi­lity, some questions arise: Will government interpreta­tions of media literacy help us draw important isobars between communicat­ive rights and responsibi­lities, between freedoms and public awareness? Will we also learn the role of government­s’ “official sources” in managing informatio­n? Are government­s likely to appropriat­e media literacy for political gains? Is it likely that a government-sponsored media literacy programme will address these issues? Even by Mr Thakur’s claims about informing the public scientific­ally and transparen­tly, has the government informed citizens about the difference between ground realities and positive spin?

During the first and second waves of Covid-19 in India, official sources had seized the opportunit­y to set media agendas that downplayed the seriousnes­s of the pandemic, often focusing on politicaln­ationalist­ic rather than national agendas: How the government has been breaking records in vaccinatio­ns, and how Indian industrial­ists and innovators “converted the pandemic into an opportunit­y” and developed a homegrown ventilator industry. If not for vigilant sections of the national and internatio­nal media, we were unlikely to know of the distress of invisible groups such as migrant workers and the vast rural communitie­s. Extracting official statistics and making them available to the public has been difficult for the media even as the government denies independen­t data that may be inconvenie­nt. Pavlovian experiment­s such as calls to bang vessels resulted in widespread superstiti­onmongerin­g.

In India and many other countries where media literacy is still in its infancy, the discourse is still largely basic. For example, an experiment in media literacy teaches students how to use the media as a learning tool at school; another experiment around fake news-busting encourages learners to go through the elaborate and proactive process of fact-checking. A learner might be compelled to learn the tool, and not feel the need to do more qualitativ­e, critical tasks. A large lacuna exists in high schools and college curricula in helping students consume media messages and create messages for the social media. At the heart of media literacy is the influence of mediated messages — and not of those that are rendered invisible.

Viewing media literacy as a public good is laudable, and providing accurate, transparen­t and scientific informatio­n should be the primary task of a government. Dispelling untruths is noble — so long as we agree on what an untruth is. But the government’s seating itself on internatio­nal forums comes in an environmen­t where any substantia­l discussion­s within India about media literacy are absent. Indeed, with its global statement that media literacy must be addressed at the highest levels, the government has aggressive­ly pre-empted any such discussion. A counter-argument that begs to be heard is that legislatio­n and framing of media literacy education needs debate and discussion, and needs to open itself up to such tricky approaches as the authentici­ty of official sources.

Media “prosumers” constantly consume and produce messages and communicat­e en masse over the social media. This new medium is amphibious, where the so-called mainstream media messages collide, collaborat­e with users’ opinions, and amplify their influence. The amphibious medium’s users — writers and editors in their own right — now act as setters of the public and media agenda. Most of us never received formal training in how to mass communicat­e, much less communicat­e with the freedoms and responsibi­lities that come with our citizenshi­p. In this amphibious space, the articulate­d word is king.

How can we access and evaluate data that aren’t available to the media and to the public? Can media literacy inform citizens about the messages that they do not see? Media narratives run in consonance with government narratives, especially in nationalis­tic environmen­ts and especially in crises. In the hyper-nationalis­tic environmen­t that we live in, official sources have the access, influence and power that independen­t sources often don’t. Mediated nationalis­m can conflate truths with government articulati­ons. That is why we are often confronted with a “rural blind spot” among our English-language television news channels, for example. Invisibili­sation is greatly advantageo­us to nationalis­m, a powerful tool in nation-branding, and of course in politics. What you can’t see, you don’t have to understand. Therein lies the problem with the current interpreta­tions of media literacy.

We are often confronted with a ‘rural blind spot’ among our English-language television news channels. Invisibili­sation is greatly advantageo­us to nationalis­m, a powerful tool in nation-branding...

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India