Communication and persuasion: A democratic setting LOOKING AHEAD After reading this chapter, you will be able to, among other things: • defi ne and describe persuasion using communicatio
Trang 1www.jutaacademic.co.za Johann C de Wet
This fourth edition of The art of Persuasive Communication – A process situates contemporary
persuasive practices against the background of the rich history of rhetoric and within the setting of a
democratic state.
The work is theoretically well-grounded and considerate of the practical dimensions of persuasion –
from its broad starting points in an interpersonal setting to its manifestation as mass persuasion or
propaganda in the wider political sphere Contemporary examples, including rhetorical discourses of
South African statesmen, are provided to facilitate understanding.
Throughout, the author addresses critical issues that are important to communication science scholars
and practitioners, as well as those active in related disciplines such as political science, sociology,
social psychology and rhetorical studies In fact, the book should be helpful to potential persuaders and
persuadees across the broad spectrum of society It will give persuadees a better chance to identify
persuasion and defend themselves against the unscrupulous.
There is much new material in the fourth edition, especially with regard to the role of social media;
leadership, political language and persuasion; and rhetorical criticism, including constructing the
rhetorical imprint of a public rhetor.
Professor Dr Johann de Wet, author, co-author and editor of numerous academic titles, is currently
attached to the Department of Communication Science at the University of the Free State in Bloemfontein,
South Africa He teaches, and consults on, persuasive communication, political communication and
Trang 5Second edition 1991
Third edition 2010
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Trang 6Preface xi
Chapter one: Communication and persuasion: A democratic setting 1
1.1 Introduction: On communication 2
1.2 Persuasion as a process of communication 4
1.2.1 Forms of persuasion: A brief synopsis 5
1.2.2 Persuasion as art and science 6
1.3 Persuasion in the service of democracy 7
1.3.1 Democracy as a form of government 7
1.3.2 Democracy as ideology 9
1.3.3 Democracy and freedom 11
1.3.3.1 Individual freedoms and democracy 12
1.3.3.2 Freedom of thought and discussion 13
1.3.3.3 Freedom in a democracy: The underlying communicological idea 15
1.3.4 Democracy and equality 15
1.3.4.1 Tocqueville’s warning 16
1.3.4.2 Equality in a democracy: The basic communicological idea 17
1.3.5 Freedom versus equality 17
1.3.6 Questions for South African and other communities 18
1.4 Persuasion and ethics 21
1.4.1 Ethical persuasion: A question of approach and culture 22
1.5 Resistance to persuasion 24
1.5.1 Creating a social consciousness and self-consciousness of persuasion 25
Chapter two: Persuasive communication: The historical context 28
2.1 Introduction: The Greek roots 29
2.2 Plato’s criticism of rhetoric 29
2.3 Aristotle’s view of rhetoric 31
2.3.1 Rhetoric as an art 32
2.3.2 Artistic proofs and the enthymeme 34
2.4 The Romans and the classical tradition 36
2.5 Further historical development of rhetoric: A brief overview 37
Chapter three: Broad starting points of interpersonal persuasion 43
3.1 Introduction 44
3.2 Verbal messages 44
3.2.1 Consider human emotions 44
3.2.1.1 Attitudes 44
3.2.1.2 Needs 45
3.2.1.3 Consistency 47
Trang 73.2.2 Be rational 48
3.2.2.1 Evidence 48
3.2.2.2 Reasoning 50
3.2.2.3 Argumentation 51
3.2.3 Show credibility 55
3.2.3.1 Expertness 55
3.2.3.2 Trustworthiness 55
3.2.3.3 Goodwill 55
3.3 Non-verbal messages 56
3.3.1 Objectics 57
3.3.2 Proxemics 57
3.3.3 Chronemics 58
3.3.4 Haptics 58
3.3.5 Kinesics 58
3.3.6 Oculesics 59
3.3.7 Vocalics 59
3.4 Key questions and answers 60
Chapter four: Theories of interpersonal persuasion 65
4.1 Introduction 66
4.2 Attitude change theory 66
4.3 Theories of reasoned action and planned behaviour 67
4.4 Learning theories 68
4.4.1 Classical conditioning and Skinnerian behaviourism 68
4.4.2 Social learning theory 70
4.5 Consistency theories 70
4.5.1 Balance theory 71
4.5.2 Congruity theory 71
4.5.3 Cognitive dissonance theory 71
4.5.4 Belief hierarchy 72
4.6 Social judgement–involvement theory 73
4.7 Elaboration likelihood theory 74
Chapter five: Persuasion, mass and social media, and public opinion 77
5.1 Introduction: A changed circumstance 78
5.2 Traditional theories of mass media effects 79
5.3 The role of the traditional news media 83
5.3.1 On defining news 83
5.3.2 Towards an integrated approach to understanding news selection 84
5.4 Social media 86
Trang 85.5 Public opinion 89
5.5.1 Solid, fluid and gaseous public opinion 89
5.5.2 Characterising public opinion 90
5.6 A model and a sequence of mass persuasion 93
5.6.1 Rank’s model of persuasion 93
5.6.2 Monroe’s motivated sequence 95
Chapter six: Perspectives of propaganda 98
6.1 Propaganda: A historical orientation 99
6.2 The traditional perspective of propaganda 101
6.2.1 The basic techniques 103
6.2.2 The difference between democratic and totalitarian propaganda 104
6.3 Bureaucratic propaganda 105
6.4 Ellul’s view of propaganda 107
6.4.1 Ellul on democracy’s need of propaganda 112
6.4.2 Ellul’s contribution 113
Chapter seven: Leadership, persuasive language and politics 117
7.1 Leadership 118
7.1.1 On transformational leadership 118
7.2 Language and politics 120
7.3 Political persuasion: Language styles and settings 121
7.3.1 The oratory setting 122
7.3.2 The small group bargaining setting 124
7.3.3 The assembly debate setting 126
7.3.4 The non-violent resistance setting 127
7.4 Directed political language 131
7.4.1 Shifting patterns in key words and phrases in South Africa 134
Chapter eight: Image and persuasive political campaign management 139
8.1 Persuasion, politics and image management 140
8.1.1 Political image, identity and personality 140
8.1.2 The art of image management: Goffman’s view 140
8.1.2.1 Defensive measures in the art of image management 142
8.1.2.2 Protective measures in the art of image management 142
8.1.3 A case for news media diplomacy 143
8.2 Persuasion and political election campaigns 145
8.2.1 On political campaigns and movements 145
8.2.2 The candidate 147
8.2.3 The style and arrangement of a formal political speech 148
8.2.3.1 Style 149
8.2.3.2 Arrangement 150
Trang 98.2.4 Campaign management 151
8.2.4.1 Research 151
8.2.4.2 Strategy formulation 152
8.2.4.3 Fund-raising 156
8.2.4.4 Advertising and media use 156
8.2.4.5 Debate planning 159
Chapter nine: Persuasion and political debates 162
9.1 Introduction 163
9.2 Arguments for and against debate 166
9.3 Content and relational strategies 167
9.3.1 Content strategies 167
9.3.2 Relational strategies 168
9.4 Debate tactics 169
9.4.1 Verbal tactics 169
9.4.2 Non-verbal tactics 172
9.5 Debate effects 173
9.5.1 The concept of the debate winner 174
Chapter ten: Persuasion and political negotiation 178
10.1 The concepts of political negotiation and bargaining 179
10.2 Negotiation as a peaceful alternative to political conflict 179
10.3Negotiation styles and skills 181
10.4 A joint problem-solving approach as the ideal 182
10.4.1 A win-win strategy 183
10.5The role of a mediator 186
10.6International political negotiation 187
10.6.1 Diplomatic persuasion: Complicating factors 190
10.6.1.1 The role of interests 190
10.6.1.2 The role of power 191
10.6.1.3 The role of ideology 191
10.6.1.4 The role of propaganda 192
10.6.1.5 The role of trust 193
Chapter eleven: Rhetorical discourses of South African statesmen 195
11.1Introduction 196
11.2 FW de Klerk’s historic speech, February 1990 196
11.2.1 The text of De Klerk’s opening address 197
11.3 Mandela and De Klerk on receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, December 1993 210
11.3.1 The text of Mandela’s acceptance speech 211
11.3.2 The text of De Klerk’s acceptance speech 215
Trang 1011.4 Nelson Mandela’s inaugural address, May 1994 222
11.4.1 The text of Mandela’s inaugural speech 223
11.5 Thabo Mbeki on NEPAD and the AU, October 2001 226
11.5.1 The text of Mbeki’s speech on NEPAD and the AU 226
11.6Jacob Zuma’s inaugural address, May 2009 235
11.6.1 The text of Zuma’s inaugural speech 236
11.7Critiquing political discourses 241
11.7.1 Focusing on structure 243
11.7.1.1 De Klerk’s first parliamentary opening address, February 1990 243
11.7.1.2 Mbeki’s speech on NEPAD and the AU, October 2001 244
11.7.2 Focusing on the use of the Aristotelian artistic proofs 244
11.7.2.1 De Klerk’s first parliamentary opening address, February 1990 245
11.7.2.2 Mandela’s inaugural address, May 1994 249
11.7.3 Focusing on worth and Nilsen’s four-part method 250
11.7.3.1 Mandela and De Klerk’s acceptance speeches, December 1993 251
11.7.3.2 Mbeki’s address on NEPAD and the AU, October 2001 252
11.7.4 Focusing on outcomes 255
11.7.4.1 Zuma’s inaugural address, May 2009 256
Chapter twelve: Persuasion and the rhetorical imprint of a public rhetor 261
12.1Introduction 262
12.2A rhetorical imprint 262
12.2.1 Focusing on lines of argument 263
12.3Constructing a rhetorical imprint 264
12.3.1 Deconstructing the data 264
12.3.2 Building the interpretation 264
12.4Dr Van Zyl Slabbert as a public rhetor 265
12.4.1 Van Zyl Slabbert’s lines of argument 267
12.4.1.1 From South Africa’s options: Strategies for sharing power (1979:1–30; 120–153) 267
12.4.1.2 From The last white Parliament (1985:105–143) 268
12.4.1.3 From Van Zyl Slabbert’s 1985 parliamentary speeches (in Hansard: 22–44; 409–411; 686–694; 1282–1283; 3114–3119; 3728; 3862–3867; 4910–4918; 7100–7110) 270
Trang 1112.4.1.4 From The system and the struggle (1989:7–22; 44–83)
(which includes chapters written between 1975
and 1985) 272
12.4.2 Discussion and summation 273
12.5Van Zyl Slabbert’s rhetorical imprint 276
References 279
Name index 291
Subject index 294
Trang 12This fourth edition of The art of persuasive communication – A process is a
revision and expansion of the third edition published in 2010
As argued before, apart from the vast scholarly interest shown in persuasive
communication throughout the centuries, persuasion also stimulates much
wider interest This is due to its broad social significance, among other things
After all, the ‘in-groups’ in society are always interested in how persuasion
can be used to cement their privileged positions, while the ‘out-groups’ see
persuasive communication as a non-violent means of effecting change, so that
they too can enjoy a better life While most of us want to be effective
persuaders, we should recognise that we are always victims of persuasion as
well Thus, the original motive for writing about persuasive communication
remains the same: It has pervasive existential relevance
There are two things that separate this book from others in the field First, it
attempts to situate most of the critical issues within the theoretical framework
of a democratic society Secondly, it provides examples related to South
Africa’s transition to democracy and beyond With regard to the practical
application of persuasion, this book focuses mainly on one-to-many
persuasion It does so by situating persuasive practices against the rich
background of rhetoric
While the text does not, of course, set out to convey all the insight on the
topics discussed, it aims to provide useful knowledge to both potential
persuaders and persuadees – to potential persuadees in the sense that it will
give them a better chance to identify persuasion and defend themselves
against the unscrupulous
A large part of this edition is devoted to persuasive communication in politics
The choice of politics is deliberate With regard to its rhetorical base and
organisational variables, political communication has been rather neglected
by South African communication scientists, partly because it is a relatively
new sub-discipline of communication science Moreover, throughout the ages
rhetoric has identified itself as a powerful political instrument that functions
as a form of art
Many years ago, a critical reader of an earlier edition reminded me that I
should emphasise somewhere that, after much has been said and written,
human beings are persuaded only as far as they consider it to be in their own
interests I agree, but where persuadees are reluctant to be persuaded (also for
their own good), the persuader can attempt to make them believe that it
Trang 13would be in their own interests to do as he/she has suggested That is the real
art of persuasion Art implies the ability to do something – to influence, in
this case Creating identification between the persuader and persuadee is
crucial to the process, as Kenneth Burke would say But persuasive
communication is also a science, since it involves theories or creative
explanations of how processes occur as they do
How does this edition differ from the third edition?
• The arrangement of the contents has been revised to facilitate greater
understanding
• New contemporary examples related to South Africa have been included
• There is much new material, especially with regard to the role of social
media; leadership, political language and persuasion; and rhetorical
criticism, including constructing the rhetorical imprint of a public rhetor
Johann C de Wet
Bloemfontein, South Africa
July 2016
Trang 14Communication and persuasion:
A democratic setting
LOOKING AHEAD
After reading this chapter, you will be able to, among other things:
• defi ne and describe persuasion using communication science
terminology
• explain different forms of persuasion
• situate persuasion in a democratic context and relate its relevance
for South African society
• relate persuasion to ethics
• understand the various ways that the individual can resist
persuasion
Trang 151.1 INTRODUCTION: ON COMMUNICATION
The word ‘communication’ originates from the Latin communicatio, which
has two major meanings (Gepp & Haigh, 1935:102):
1 Making common, imparting
2 Taking your audience into your confidence
Our focus is on the first meaning of communication The linking of ‘making
common’ and ‘imparting’ seems to suggest that making common implies not
so much ‘reducing to one’ as achieving mutual understanding through
imparting ideas
The concept of communication is defined and used in different ways in the
literature of communication science But it is often reduced to mean the process
of expressing and interpreting messages – of imparting ideas – between
communicator and recipient, with the aim of coming to mutual understanding
on certain subject matter
Such a basic understanding implies the presence of a timeless and durable
structure that characterises all forms of human communication, a structure
that Van Schoor (1979:13) calls the communication ‘triptych’ The structure
consists of a communicator, a medium in which a message is embedded, and
a recipient Also rightfully implied in this definition is the active role of the
communicator and recipient, the recipient being not just an object to be
manipulated by the communicator
Communication always takes place within a given social circumstance or
context
Communication has various forms: intrapersonal, dyadic, small group, public,
mass and vertical communication These are defined as follows:
• Intrapersonal communication refers to an individual’s ability to think, feel
and use language for understanding and expressing ideas It sometimes
also refers to a dialogue held within the self, as ‘intra’ in the word
‘intrapersonal’ means ‘within’
• Dyadic communication happens only between two people This is
communication in its most basic sense, and it is generally agreed that here,
in the dyadic setting, the force of persuasion is at its strongest
• Small group communication takes place in small groups, usually ranging in
size from three to about 12 members Small group communication is used to
enable people to accomplish things together, such as solving problems or
making decisions Examples of small groups are committees and the family
Trang 16• Public communication refers to a situation in which a communicator (for
example, a public speaker, an entertainer or a lecturer) does most of the
talking, while several dozens to several hundreds or thousands do most of
the listening The relatively face-to-face nature of public communication
allows recipients to participate actively in the communication process
through their occasional responses to what the communicator says Such
responses also enable the communicator to make on-the-spot adjustments
to the message
• Mass communication is mediated; it involves various media, which range
from the now traditional (such as newspapers, radio and television) to
fairly new media (such as bulk e-mails and SMSs and the internet), in order
to transmit messages to an almost unlimited number of recipients The
concept of ‘mass’ in ‘mass communication’ has a quantitative meaning – it
refers to the number, rather than the nature, of recipients who are reached
• Vertical communication is seen as your communication with a God or higher
being However, in the organisational or corporate world, vertical
communication (as opposed to horizontal communication) refers to the
usually downward flow of communication in the hierarchical structure
This book speaks of forms of communication rather than contexts of
communication The author takes this position because, for example, the
nature or quality of your message transmission with another person, the
quality of your dyadic communication with another, depends on the context
in which it takes place But it is still dyadic communication To speak of a
context of communication when referring to dyadic communication would
not allow for the different circumstances in which dyadic communication can
take place
The literature sometimes refers to levels of communication The forms of
communication noted above do function at various levels, namely:
• Intrapersonal level
• Interpersonal level (for dyadic, small group and public communication)
• Mass level
• Vertical level
Communication can take place with or without words When we communicate
or persuade intentionally without using words, we communicate or persuade
non-verbally The use of non-verbal messages in the process of persuasion is
discussed in Chapter 3, Section 3.3
Trang 171.2 PERSUASION AS A PROCESS OF COMMUNICATION
Persuasion predominates in our life-worlds In every field of human existence,
be it at the dyadic, group or public level, people are confronted with persuasion
and take part in it
Moreover, persuasion pervades human communication in all its forms: in
intrapersonal, dyadic, small group, public, mass and vertical communication
With regard to intrapersonal communication, we speak of self-persuasion,
when a person takes an active role in persuading him-/herself to think or act
in a certain way (cf Bettinghaus & Cody, 1994:79ff.)
Of course, persuasion can be studied in various other disciplines and
sub-disciplines, such as social psychology But it is fundamentally a process of
communication (cf Benoit & Benoit, 2008:7ff.) – its natural home is
communication science
Like communication, persuasion is defined and used in various ways
However, for our purposes, persuasion in its ideal state may be defined as a
process of communication in which a communicator succeeds in voluntarily
forming, sustaining or changing the attitudes and/or behaviour of a recipient
or a group of recipients in accordance with what the communicator intends
by his/her message
The following words and phrases in this working definition need to be
emphasised:
• A process of communication There is expression and interpretation of
messages when persuasion occurs The process and effect of such
expression and interpretation may take place fairly quickly, or over a
period of time Moreover, as in the case of communication, a timeless and
durable structure is present in the persuasion process This structure, or
‘triptych’, consists of a persuader (communicator), a medium in which a
message is embedded, and a persuadee (recipient)
• Voluntarily The recipient is not forced into being persuaded He/She
always has the right to choose, even though the choices are sometimes
very limited
• Forming, sustaining or changing Persuasion is used not only to change (as is
the general perception), but also to sustain or to maintain, or even to
intensify, the attitudes or behaviour of recipients
• What the communicator intends As in the case of communication, persuasion
is intentional – it always has a purpose.
A situation becomes persuasive through the focus on accomplishing something
predetermined and directional with regard to recipients For this reason, not all
Trang 18communication can be regarded as persuasion Engaging in small talk with a
friend, for example, which is a form of dyadic communication, may have
nothing to do with being persuasive – of accomplishing something
predetermined and directional
Persuasion directs itself at problems of, or opportunities for, human action in
the areas of the contingent and the probable Therefore persuasion concerns
itself with human affairs
Persuasion seeks to adapt ideas to people and people to ideas We may see this
process as a continuum that runs from the comprehensive adaptation of ideas
at one extreme — ‘telling people only what they want to hear’ – to full
regeneration of ideas at the other extreme, expressed in terms such as ‘facts
speak for themselves’ Persuasion normally functions closer to the more
moderate centre of the continuum, away from the extremes Here, on the one
hand, in order for recipients to be accommodated, difficult and unfamiliar
ideas have to be modified without being distorted or invalidated, while on the
other hand recipients have to be prepared, through the breaking-down of
their prejudices and ignorance, without being deprived of their judgements
(Bryant, 1953:23)
1.2.1 Forms of persuasion: A brief synopsis
There are many forms of persuasion Arguably, the more important forms are
education, seduction, sanctions, manipulation, blackmail, propaganda,
indoctrination and psychological warfare (Finn, Weich & Rensburg, 1983; cf
Brown, 1963)
• Education broadly revolves around helping recipients (such as learners and
students) to understand why they do what they do, whereas in persuasion
it is not essential for the recipient to understand why he/she acts in a
certain way
• Seduction, often used in advertising and public relations, aims partly to
persuade the recipient to surrender to spending money Think of a beautiful
model promoting a new perfume or a charity fund-raising campaign
during the festive season, respectively
• Sanctions are measures applied to ‘enforce’ obedience to rules and laws,
and may be put in place overtly or covertly During apartheid, South Africa
was overtly subjected to international sanctions
• Manipulation has broad relevance and may be viewed as the successful
attempt by the communicator to use the recipient as an object to be
exploited, by, for example, using his/her charm to get what he/she wants
• Blackmail is severe manipulation in that it is the act of putting pressure on
a person or a group to do something they do not want to do, for example by
threatening them or making them feel guilty
Trang 19• Propaganda, a highly problematic form of persuasion, is usually addressed,
for good or bad purposes, to the group or the many (the masses) rather
than to individuals For this reason, the terms ‘mass persuasion’ and
‘propaganda’ are often used interchangeably (Propaganda is discussed in
detail in Chapter 6.)
• Indoctrination refers to the systematic teaching of beliefs and attitudes to a
person or a group without providing contrary messages, thus ensuring
that there are few alternatives, if any Indoctrination is often practised in
totalitarian states and in religion
• Psychological warfare takes place when the persuader is dealing with a
foreign adversary whose morale he/she seeks to destroy by psychological
means The idea is that the opponent should begin to doubt the validity of
his/her beliefs and actions This type of warfare flourishes during war, but
it is also practised in peacetime, for example as we see in the ongoing
tensions between the Muslim and Western worlds
Although persuasion is often used for dishonest ends, there is no doubt that
human beings cannot live without it This is because people are continually
confronted with choices, whether real or fictional, and want to be comfortable
with what they think should be done, or is to be done, about a given matter
1.2.2 Persuasion as art and science
Persuasion is an art, because it relates to the capability of doing something
(persuading someone, which of course also requires thought) and involves
probabilities rather than certainty – we cannot know exactly what the effects
will be if the persuader uses this or that particular technique
But persuasion is also a science, as it relies on theories to explain why people
may be persuaded by a communicator Science is the pursuit of ‘truth’, while
a theory is a creative interpretation or explanation of why processes (or
events) occur as they do In short, a theory is a way of knowing A theory of
persuasion attempts to interpret and explain how persuasion works A theory
of communication also attempts to interpret how communication takes place
A theory consists of two parts:
1 Basic concepts (words or phrases that have a particular meaning in a
given context)
2 Statements concerning the relationships between these concepts
A theory is different from a model A model is a graphic representation of a
phenomenon, such as persuasion Because by its nature the model highlights
only certain aspects of the process under investigation, be it persuasion or
simple communication, it is a limited representation A model of persuasion
Trang 20would show how persuasion takes place – in graphic form, and in an incomplete
or simplified way A theory of persuasion, by contrast, is much more
comprehensive, because it focuses on more of the aspects of the process under
investigation
Persuasive communication, like all scientific disciplines and sub-disciplines,
can be studied from different angles In examining persuasion in this book,
we take the functional approach: Persuasion is seen to function in the service
of something, in this case in the service of a democratic society
1.3 PERSUASION IN THE SERVICE OF DEMOCRACY
For a democracy to work and to survive, it must rely on persuasion, whether
in settling disputes, selling ideas and products, or changing people’s attitudes
This applies to interpersonal relationships, organisations, public relations,
advertising, print and broadcast journalism, politics, public speeches and
debates, religion and the arts, among others Persuasion is therefore integral
to the functioning of a democracy
The presence of persuasion in the context of a modern democracy immediately
raises questions as to the nature of the concept of democracy itself After all,
‘democracy’ is a contested term – its proper usage is continually debated The
term is most often used to refer to a form of government, even though strictly
speaking it is more of a procedure designed to place a government in office
and to establish a public order in which diverse legal interests are harmonised
and balanced We focus on this sense of democracy, as well as on democracy
as an ideology and a way of life that relates to humans as existing beings
1.3.1 Democracy as a form of government
The word ‘democracy’ or demokratia is derived from the Greek demos (the people),
and it was taken in ancient Greece to mean literally ‘the power of people who
qualify as citizens’ Here, the word ‘people’ has a very particular meaning The
Greeks did not include slaves in their conception of people (see Van Zyl Slabbert,
1991) And for the Greeks demos meant the people in the sense of ‘the common
people’ or ‘the ordinary man’ or, simply put, ‘the poor’ – not in the modern sense
of ‘the people as a whole’ or ‘every member of society’
The ancient Greeks are often regarded as the founders of democracy when
the concept is used to mean a form of government, but antiquity ultimately
rejected this form of government (Wolheim, 1975:109) It did not last even in
Athens, and famous thinkers such as Plato and Aristotle opposed it because
for them equality of political opportunity and freedom for the individual to do
as he/she likes were the salient characteristics of democracy.
Trang 21Democracy as a form of government, as practised today, is a product of the
19th and 20th centuries In ancient Athens there was a form of ‘direct
democracy’, in which ‘all’ citizens participated in decision-making, by voting
and accepting a majority verdict But except for this, authoritarianism of
some type prevailed throughout the world until after the American and
French revolutions of the late 18th century
A characteristic of all authoritarian systems is the denial of significant political
rights or privileges to most members of the body politic Consequently,
minority rule prevails in the sense that ultimate, and immediate, control of
the government is confined to a small proportion of the total adult population
Policies are decided by officials who are legally and politically responsible not
to the general public, but only to the minority who enjoy a monopoly of
governmental power
The American and French revolutions were influenced by the ideas of the
Enlightenment, and especially by ideas propagated by the great French
philosophers of the 18th century In particular, Rousseau’s assertion that the
individual exists prior to the state, and thus has rights that are in no sense
dependent on the will of any ruler, was a major contribution to democratic
thought during this period (Barbrook, 1975:115–116)
However, the Western conception of democracy – as a form of government
created by the will of the majority of citizens – was not accepted unconditionally
during the 19th century In fact, 19th century thought is pervaded with a fear
of democracy, on the grounds that it could lead to a ‘tyranny of the majority’
(see Arblaster, 1984:264–283)
To speak of democracy as a form of government is also to distinguish
arrangements and actions in society as characteristics from a normative
perspective (see Connolly, 1983:29–34) In contemporary Western thought,
democracy is seen as ‘representative’ or ‘indirect’ (as opposed to ‘direct’
democracy), in which the people choose, for example by voting for,
representatives who are then answerable to them, but who are also directly
involved in the practice of government, usually without further consultation
(Raphael, 1979:146ff.; Scruton, 1982:115–117) The term ‘democracy’ in this
sense is usually reserved for political systems that accept certain basic
normative assumptions These may be divided into three broad categories:
1 Government should reflect the people’s electoral will and choice – hence
the constitutional provision for regular elections, usually by the universal
right to vote, by secret ballot, with representatives of at least two parties
standing for election
2 Basic individual freedoms (other than political rights) should be
recognised by government These freedoms include freedom of speech,
Trang 22information and the press; freedom of assembly; freedom of association;
religious freedom; and freedom from arbitrary arrest and imprisonment
3 These freedoms should be exercised according to the rule of law The rule
of law may be described as a doctrine which prescribes that no power can
be exercised except according to procedures, principles and constraints
contained in the law (The law must obviously be directly or indirectly
representative of the people’s will.) Moreover, any citizen can find redress
against any other, however powerfully placed, and against the officers of
the state itself, for any act that involves a breach of the law This implies
that (governmental) powers are kept separate, that is, an independent
judiciary and an executive separately elected or responsible to an elected
legislature
The idea of an independent political public sphere operating as an intermediary
system between state or government and society in a democracy has long been
propagated by the German sociologist and philosopher Juergen Habermas
Habermas (2006) notes that the political public sphere should be instrumental
in forming considered public opinions through, among other matters, diversity
of independent mass media and through general access of inclusive mass
audiences to the public sphere Habermas (2006) suggests that ‘the different
weighting citizens of different nations assign to either rights and liberties, or to
inclusion and equality, or to deliberation and problem solving, determines how
they see themselves as members of their political community’
1.3.2 Democracy as ideology
Along with nationalism, socialism and communism, democracy may be regarded
as a fundamental ideology in our age The term ‘ideology’ is an anglicised version of
the French word idéologie, and it was invented in the late 18th century by a school
of thinkers called les idéologues led by Destutt de Tracy This concept was first used
to describe a new ‘science of ideas’ (Cox, 1969:10)
After Napoleon accused the ideologues of advocating revolutionary ideas,
ideology gained the additional meaning of abstract, impractical or fanatical
theories, which of course gave the concept a negative connotation This view
became more widely accepted, especially after the appearance of The German
Ideology by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in 1939 Here, ideology acquired
the meaning of ‘false consciousness’, that is, a state of mentality that does not
keep track, or is a distortion, of social reality (see Larrain [1982:35–67], and
Marx & Engels [1939])
This mainly negative connotation has gradually disappeared, but ideology
continues to be linked with socio-political ideas and officially sanctioned
doctrines of society acquired in the past three centuries
Trang 23Today ideology generally refers to a system of socio-political ideas that social
groups aim to implement practically in a given society These ‘ideas’ are
characterised by elements of:
• valuation – cherished ideas
• actuality – ideas relating to the present
• belief – believed, rather than proven, ideas (Ellul, 1973:116).
In connection with democracy, these ideas have to do with the individual’s
natural right to control the government of the day (a cherished idea relating
to the present) through regular elections and the exercise of basic freedoms in
accordance with the rule of law The idea that this natural right is recognised
only in a democracy, and that democracy is therefore the best form of
government, is an idea that is believed rather than proven
In African philosophy, democracy relates to socialist goals and aims, and has
a communal focus According to Senghor (1998:443):
[t]his is a community-based society, communal, not collectivist We are
concerned, here, not with a mere collection of individuals, but with people
conspiring together, conspiring in the basic Latin sense, united among
themselves even to the very center of their being, communing through their
ancestors with God, who is the center of all centers
Thus, in the working out of our “African mode of socialism”, the problem is
not how to put an end to the exploitation of man by his fellow, but to prevent
its ever happening, by bringing political and economic democracy back to
life; our problem is not how to satisfy spiritual, that is, cultural needs, but
how to keep the fervour of the black soul alive It is a question, once again, of
modernising our values by borrowing from European socialism its science
and technical skill, above all its spirit of progress
The Western conception of democracy focuses on differences between parties in
which the winner reigns supreme through the ballot box By contrast, the
African conception of democracy upholds unity through consensus and dialogue
as the ideal Everyone ideally has the right to participate in the dialogue and
decision-making Respect is given to the individual who contributes to unity and
justice in dialogue, which may lead to a kind of coalition process
In former president Thabo Mbeki’s (2001:149–157) definitive speech on the
New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD), democratic principles
and institutions, as well as popular participation and good governance, are
clear objectives for the continent (see Chapter 11 Section 11.5.1) Mbeki
(2001) calls for African leaders to adopt the true spirit of democracy in which,
among other things, human rights are protected and people-centred
Trang 24development and market-orientated economies predominate In this call, a
mixture of traditional Western and African approaches to democracy comes
to the fore (Mbeki, 2001)
Achille Mbembe (2009), an influential African historian and political
philosopher who was born in Cameroon but now resides in South Africa,
suggests that in many African countries the masses feel that democracy has
betrayed them They believe that they are still powerless and bent on survival
(Mbembe, 2009) The law and constitution in many African countries have
made a mockery of freedom (Mbembe, 2009) The idea that Africans held
during the first half of the 20th century, if they could rid themselves of
colonialism and become independent, was of a (democratic) state in which life
would be humane and governed by ethics (Mbembe, 2009) Instead, in many
cases, independence brought about domination by a few, and the self-interest of
those in power replaced ethics (Mbembe, 2009) Freedom was abandoned in
favour of domination, corruption and violence, explains Mbembe (2009)
The above description of democracy focuses mainly on its governmental and
ideological nature But democracy’s aims are most clearly concerned with a
person’s quality of life, as manifested in human freedom and equality and,
concomitantly, as manifested in a person’s ability to communicate freely with
others and the world In short, any communicator in a democracy has the
right to try to persuade the recipient of his/her point of view (within the limits
set by the law) The recipient, in turn, has the right (the freedom) to choose
whether he/she wants to accept the communicator’s point of view
We now turn to the respective principles of freedom and equality underlying
the (Western) concept of democracy
1.3.3 Democracy and freedom
Freedom is absence of restraint The principle has negative and positive
connotations: the former conveyed in the expression ‘freedom from’ (for
example, legal restraints or racial discrimination), the latter in ‘freedom to’
(for instance, realise your aims or to express your views in public)
All too often, the negative side of freedom has dominant concerns We feel
that just ‘freedom from’ is not enough for freedom to prevail The quest on
the road into the unknown, uncertain and insecure is also part of freedom
After all, since we do not always know what is best for us, we explore in order
to find solutions Freedom (as the absence of restraint) is therefore always
freedom from some possible restraint and freedom to do what you want or
choose to do provided that you do it responsibly, and do not encroach upon
another person’s freedom (Scruton, 1982:180–181; cf Raphael, 1981:81)
Trang 251.3.3.1 Individual freedoms and democracy
It is argued above that certain individual freedoms are indeed essential to
democracy: rights of direct or indirect participation in the process of
government; freedom of speech, information and the press; freedom of
assembly; freedom of association; and religious freedom
These freedoms are granted because they conform to basic liberal ideas
associated with Western democracy, such as:
• belief in the supreme value of the individual (and thus not of the state)
• belief that the individual has natural rights – rights that belong to all human
beings by nature, such as the right to life and to control government
• belief that these natural rights exist independently of government, and
ought to be protected by and against government
• recognition of the supreme value of an individual’s freedom (see Beck,
1979:47–64)
The relationship between democracy and liberalism is not as natural as we
might expect, despite ‘liberal democracy’ being such a common term that we
tend to imagine the two constituent principles having always operated in
harmony In fact, throughout history there have been tensions between the
advocates of democracy and liberalism Democracy, in its original sense of
rule by the people or government in accordance with the will of the bulk of
the people, emphasised equality and was regarded by liberals as a ‘bad’ word,
fatal to individual freedom and to the civilised living that liberalism stands
for However, since the 20th century liberals have come to view Western
democracy not as an end in itself, but as a means of preserving freedom of the
individual, to secure a maximum of freedom for citizens (see Arblaster,
1984:75–79)
‘Freedom’ (of the individual) also implies that to which you have a right (with
its concomitant obligations), and ‘right’ in turn implies ‘right to choose’
(‘Freedom’ and ‘liberty’ are sometimes used interchangeably But ‘liberty’ is
normally used in English to refer only to ‘social freedom’, that is, freedom
from restraint by the action of other people; it is not used in the sense of
freedom to choose – see Raphael [1981:82].)
This right (or freedom) to choose also distinguishes human beings from
animals For instance, a human being can choose to commit suicide, an
animal cannot Choice is the selection of one possibility among several More
than one possibility or course of action must be open to a person before that
person can be said to have a choice – you must not be prevented by physical or
psychological causes from having at least two genuine options
Trang 26Absolute freedom, however, is an unattainable ideal; legal and societal
constraints – such as custom, tradition and public opinion – prevent it Also,
to the extent that you are ‘duty-bound’ to respect the freedom of another,
freedom is limited rather than absolute Moreover, if all people were absolutely
free to do as they pleased, the extent of an individual’s actual freedom would
be measured by his/her power to do what he/she wanted and by his/her ability
to resist invasive action by others and the law The term ‘power’ is used
broadly here – in the Weberian sense – as the chance of an individual realising
his/her own will in a communal action even against the resistance of others
who participate in the action (Weber, 1982:80)
1.3.3.2 Freedom of thought and discussion
In a democracy, a person’s ‘freedom to choose’ also implies that we have a
right to think whatever we want – hence the principle of freedom of thought
Any attempt to impose thoughts on an individual or to stop him/her choosing,
through law, is doomed to failure
This right to think whatever we want does not, however, mean that such
thoughts are entirely our own In fact, your thoughts can never be regarded as
a product just of your own deliberation, free from external influences of any
kind Thinking is conditioned, for instance, by social circumstances and by
various propaganda practices that flourish in a democracy Nevertheless we
can make many of our thoughts our own by living them, by attaching meanings
to them
In theory, by adhering to the principle of freedom, a democracy attempts to
provide the individual with a wide variety of viewpoints, which in turn give
him/her an opportunity to choose the viewpoint that pleases him/her the
most – for example through the doctrine of the freedom of the press, among
others But press freedom, understood broadly as meaning that the mass
media should not be under governmental control, does not guarantee that the
individual can choose a particular viewpoint among many Private media
groups may all propagate the same view (on the merits of the free enterprise
system, for instance) to the exclusion of other viewpoints
Freedom of thought is an evasive but necessary ideal for a democracy In the
essay On liberty, written in 1859, John Stuart Mill advocates complete freedom
of thought and discussion within the political order Mill (1975:50–51) bases
his argument on four grounds:
Firstly, if any opinion is compelled to silence, that opinion may, for aught we
can certainly know, be true To deny this is to assume our own infallibility
Trang 27Secondly, though the silenced opinion be an error, it may, and very commonly
does, contain a portion of truth; and since the general or prevailing opinion
on any subject is rarely or never the whole truth, it is only by collision of
adverse opinions that the remainder of the truth has any chance of being
supplied
Thirdly, even if the received opinion be not only true, but the whole truth;
unless it is suffered to be, and actually is, vigorously and earnestly contested,
it will, by most of those who receive it, be held in the manner of prejudice,
with little comprehension or feeling of its rational grounds
And not only this, but fourthly, the meaning of the doctrine itself will be in
danger of being lost, or enfeebled, and deprived of its vital effect on the
character and conduct; the dogma becoming a mere formal profession,
inefficacious for good, but cumbering the ground, and preventing the growth
of any real and heartfelt conviction, from reason or personal experience
As Levi (1959:37–46) suggests, Mill advocates such freedom of thought and
discussion in order to foster free development of individuality Individuality
incorporates the elements of spontaneity and diversity, and the latitude of
choice, provided by the very freedom of thought, expression and discussion
(mutual criticism) (Levi, 1959)
Consciousness of individuality is a fairly recent phenomenon in human
history Historically, human beings have been regarded as social animals It
was only in the Renaissance that the individual and his/her needs began to
move closer to the centre of human thought Mill (1975) was thus in line with
post-medieval tradition, which he carried forward when he stressed the
unique importance of the individual He did not imply that the individual was
something apart from, and unrelated to, the society in which he/she lived and
of which he/she was a product (Mill, 1975) His point was that each individual
has a unique set of personal qualities significantly different from those of his/
her fellow men and women, qualities which must be prized and encouraged
for their creative potentialities (Mill, 1975)
For Mill (1975), there is no real freedom for a person in a democracy if
conflicting interests cannot be recognised without the individual being
victimised either in his/her relations with the institutions of government or in
his/her personal claims against the pressures of mass sentiment
As Alexis de Tocqueville (1951) expounds in Democracy in America, Mill
emphasises that the threat to individual freedom in a democracy lies not so
much in the mandates of law, but in the pressures of public sentiment, which he
fears will also lead to intellectual stagnation The pressure of public sentiment
Trang 28that enhances conformity, Mill (1975:15) warns, is an evil that tends to grow
more formidable People, whether as rulers or as fellow citizens, impose their
own opinions and inclinations as a rule on others (Mill, 1975) Furthermore,
this is so energetically supported that it is hardly ever kept under restraint by
anything but want of power, and that power is not declining but growing
(Mill, 1975)
Mill’s (1975) pointed remarks seem to suggest that an individual’s freedom in a
democracy could also depend on his/her ability to demand and receive the right
to seek alone (if necessary) the truth about any matter that interests him/her
Dahrendorf (1979) may say that such ability would increase an individual’s ‘life
chances’ in a democracy (see also Boraine’s [1991] reference to ‘life chances’)
Dahrendorf (1979:34) describes life chances as opportunities for individual
action arising from the interrelationship between ‘opinions’ (possibilities of
choice) and ‘ligatures’ (bonds, such as family or community, that the
individual has been born into or has acquired) An individual’s life chances
could increase or decrease, depending on the relationship between his/her
options and his/her ligatures – the fewer ligatures and the more options, the
greater his/her life chances Although Dahrendorf (1979:38) does not equate
freedom with life chances, he notes that they are ‘closely related’, in that
freedom is about giving an individual opportunities to choose
1.3.3.3 Freedom in a democracy: The underlying communicological idea
Theoretically, then, in a democracy, freedom (as a principle with active
connotations) revolves around providing an individual with opportunities to
make meaningful choices about his/her existence
The democrat is prepared to make his/her own mistakes rather than to be
directed by someone else, even though that person may have superior wisdom
The basic idea of freedom here is that self-direction – choosing and expressing
for yourself in a responsible manner – is far preferable to having decisions made
for you and imposed upon you by another (see Dewey, 1963:53–55)
1.3.4 Democracy and equality
Some degree of equality is essential to a democracy (Raphael, 1979:183ff.;
Schulz, 1977:110–114) This is generally seen as including the following:
• Equality before the law This means that the rights of all individuals in a
democracy are subject to a sovereign legislative body (such as Parliament)
and to no other factor (such as race or class) Naturally, there is never full
equality before the law For instance, children and people who are
considered to have a mental health condition are treated differently from
Trang 29adults of sound mind Neither does legal equality guarantee that all
individuals are equally able to take full advantage of the rights conferred
For example, some people, by having superior education or more money,
may be in a better position to exercise their legal rights than the poorly
educated or those with much lower funds This has given rise to the
distinction between de jure equality and de facto equality: rich and poor
have equal rights in law, but it would be wrong to claim that they have
equal power to enforce those rights
• Political equality This means that there should be equality in the ability to
vote someone into office, and to stand for election to office yourself Such
political rights should not, for instance, be confined to the rich and the
well born Political equality, like legal equality, never exists absolutely For
example, children never have the vote – it is usually the norm that only
adults have the right to vote In the United Kingdom, for instance, certain
offices of state (notably that of sovereign) are hereditary and not open to
everyone, while in the United States, you can become president, among
other things, only if you were born in that country In conferring the vote
on ‘all’ adults, democracy presupposes the view that all adults generally
have the ability to exercise their vote A form of factual equality is implied;
that is, that every adult (excluding those with a mental health condition)
has the ability to form a political judgement and to make a rational political
choice – which, of course, may not in fact be true
• Equality of opportunity This means that all individuals should be given the
same opportunity (such as in the field of education) to develop whichever
personal talents they have and to make whichever unique contributions
they can Equality of opportunity lies at the very heart of democracy Of
course, despite favouring equal opportunity, democracy still has many
inequalities, such as those of income, wealth and power
Some kinds of equality are unattainable, it seems safe to assume Differences
in individuals’ intelligence, talents, temperaments and physical characteristics,
as far as we know, are inherent in humankind
1.3.4.1 Tocqueville’s warning
Tocqueville (1951:11) pointedly warns that equality can be taken too far and
can result in a situation where people are prone to be ‘lost in the crowd’ of
their fellows; they lose respect for their own freedom and soon become
grossly indifferent to the free expression of individual thought
As legal, political and social conditions became more equal for people in 19th
century America, Tocqueville (1951) notes, Americans seemed more and
more to take pride not in their individuality, in their freedom, but rather in
their sameness He suggests that this is because the principle of equality is
Trang 30partly based on the notion that there is more intelligence and wisdom in a
number of men united than in a single individual and that the interests of the
many are to be preferred to the few (Tocqueville, 1951 Vol 1:255–256)
Moreover, Tocqueville (1951) proposes that democracy in 19th century
America had, in the sacred name of the majority, raised up a tyranny over the
minds of men as oppressive and as formidable as any in history: the tyranny
of the majority However, it is important to recall that Tocqueville had an
aristocratic bias; he argues throughout Democracy that uniformity, conformity
and mediocrity are fixed returns of egalitarian (democratic) society
(Tocqueville, 1951) (see also Aron, 1970:9)
On specific tendencies created by the principle of equality, Tocqueville (1951
Vol 2:288) notes that ‘the one [tendency] leads men straight to independence
and may suddenly drive them into anarchy; the other conducts them by a
longer, more secret, but more certain road to servitude Nations readily
discern the former tendency and are prepared to resist it; they are led away by
the latter, without perceiving its drift’
1.3.4.2 Equality in a democracy: The basic communicological idea
Theoretically, in a democracy the principle of equality conventionally relates
to equality before the law, political equality and equality of opportunity,
bearing in mind that there will always be differences in, for example, the
talents and temperaments of individuals The idea behind these forms of
equality seems to be that all people should be treated with ‘fairness’ in a
democracy A truly democratic society would then, as Dahrendorf (1961:
182–185) suggests, combine a maximum of equality of circumstances with
a minimum of equality of character
Equality in a democracy would prevail if individuals had equal opportunity to
participate and to be involved as self-conscious subjects in the communication
process Mutual respect, spontaneity and awareness of the other as an
individual would be prerequisites for people to participate in communication
in this way
1.3.5 Freedom versus equality
One of the essential conditions of a democratic state is the free play of
conflicting opinions – the right of all people to freely disagree
Consequently, we would presume that a democratic state would also respect
the line between the power of the majority and the rights of minorities
(including dissident minorities) In fact, no state can afford to disregard
Trang 31individual differences, conflicts of interest and diversity of needs in devising
satisfactory solutions for the many problems that arise in all communities
Equality is a great leveller Equality makes it exceedingly difficult for one
person or a few people to oppress the many, but in turn it makes it just as
difficult for one person to be free from the oppression of the many
Equality by itself is not ideal If all people were equally wretched, equally
poor or equally powerful, the equality would be of no benefit; in this sense,
people may be more equal in a totalitarian regime than in a democracy
The point is that if people say they want to be free and equal their demand for
freedom often puts a limit on their demand for equality (see Lipson, 1986)
For example, any attempt to achieve equality in wealth for all citizens would
surely result in a form of totalitarianism To keep people equal in wealth, in
spite of their unequal abilities, differing work performance and varying
aptitudes, would require a degree of all-round regimentation surpassing
anything that a dictator has yet achieved
Although democracy implies that certain freedoms, such as freedom of
speech, are conferred equally on all people, in the final analysis it has to be
decided which is the more important: freedom or equality
In this respect, we may be inclined to agree with Dahrendorf (1961) that a
person’s freedom must be the supreme goal Applying equality (of people) as
an all-embracing principle leads to the degeneration of humankind: It
prevents individuals from developing their personal capacities (which are
always qualitatively unequal) to the greatest possible extent, thus sacrificing
individuality for the sake of equality
In communicological terms, applying equality as an all-embracing principle
would obstruct a person’s power of individual expression, since it aims to
make people think and do alike People tend to become the same, rather than
becoming self-conscious subjects It would be in order if equality implied that
everyone could communicate on an equal subject footing so that they are able
to actualise themselves
1.3.6 Questions for South African and other communities
As argued, the principles of freedom and equality should reign supreme in a
democratic state But the right to freedom is not an absolute right, and
absolute equality is unattainable
Trang 32The principle of freedom, from which freedom of expression, press freedom
and religious freedom are all derived, has limitations, obligations and social
responsibilities in a democratic state There is no legal or moral escape
from them
Broadly speaking, communication practices in a democratic state are always
influenced by social circumstances, which include the prevailing
politico-ideological and religious climates at a given time Let us take the 2005 furore
in South Africa over cartoons depicting the prophet Muhammad as an
example The disturbance began in Denmark when an author was unable to
find anybody willing to illustrate a book about Muhammad The Danish
newspaper Jyllands-Posten regarded this as evidence of a Muslim threat to free
expression, and commissioned and published a series of cartoons of the
prophet to make a point (Kruger, 2006) In South Africa, the weekly Mail &
Guardian published one of the cartoons and was vehemently criticised by the
Muslim community The editor later apologised, after she and her family had
received death threats A High Court interdict was granted preventing any
further publication of the cartoons in South Africa Many commentators
shouted that press freedom was under threat
A more recent example occurred in 2015 when Islamist gunmen killed 12
staff members of the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris for
publishing controversial cartoons of Muhammad
The point, however, is that the press or mass media must also abide by
constraints on freedom in a democratic state, because they are part of that
state – they do not function outside of it This would apply to any
communicative practice that, for example, promotes ‘hate speech’ (see
Gelber’s [2002] work on the subject) or the ridicule, insult or denigration of a
widely practised religion
A position, albeit a conservative one, on the issue suggests that an apology for
publishing the cartoons or other insulting material does not have ramifications
for freedom of expression or press freedom Freedom sometimes has to be
balanced against other values, such as intercultural harmony, which
legitimises encroaching upon it
When choosing to rely on (press) freedom to defend particular communicative
actions, individuals and institutions need to consider true human
responsibilities in the process of verbal and non-verbal communication, also
with regard to religious issues Too many wars have raged, and are still raging,
in the name of one or other religion or religious denomination
Trang 33Intercultural sensitivities are, and have been, rife in South Africa for many
decades Communication practitioners should know this and should strive to
take others’ viewpoints into consideration Balance is an overriding concern
In communicating interculturally, use of the ‘free word’ or illustration must
be approached circumspectly The free word can cause major conflict, and
has indeed done so Those who use the free word to wound the honour or
pride of others shoot with words (Esterhuyse, 2004)
This can be said while fully appreciating the fact that without press freedom
a democratic state cannot exist Citizens must be kept informed about
socio-economic and political circumstances that influence their lives Public
opinion is formed mainly by events that the press and other media have made
publicly known Citizen involvement in the interpretation of news is necessary
for the effective functioning of public opinion And an active public opinion
steers democratic practices The press, as the fourth estate, is part of this
process
This implies that the press must be able to do its work fearlessly – in freedom,
but also with the necessary responsibility to achieve the democratic ideal
The press must be the watchdog and not the rag doll of government
As Merrill (2004:17) notes, press freedom usually leads to best journalism
practices: Freedom is needed for maximum news coverage, for the discovery
of truths and for diversity of information
The challenge facing the principle of equality in South Africa does not lie in
the idea of political equality discussed above, or in equality before the law,
but in the idea of equal opportunity in the land
Stories abound of the deep divisions between the so-called ‘haves’ (in-groups)
and ‘have-nots’ (out-groups) in South Africa For example, many of the
winning entries in a journalism competition held over more than a decade
show that the South African state has continued to grapple with inequalities:
the exploitation of the poor by the rich, the plight or hardship of disabled
people, the plight of the poor in informal settlements and rural villages, and
the devastating effects of HIV/Aids on especially the poor
Inequalities will have to be bridged as soon as possible if political stability is
to be maintained over the medium and long term The divide between rich
and poor is not simply a racial one, as in apartheid South Africa – it is also
class-based While political transformation has taken place in many spheres,
the challenge of economic transformation for the benefit of most, if not all,
has yet to be realised
Trang 34Perhaps the greatest threat to the democratic South African state is the
pervasiveness of violent crime, which mocks the principles of freedom and
equality This country has one of the highest crime rates in Africa Each day
South Africans are the victims of murder, rape, robbery and hijacking Violent
crime against children is especially horrifying Other contact crimes against
citizens of all walks of life continue unabated Among many citizens, there
seems to be very little respect for law and order, and for the life of other
human beings
The principle of freedom in this context seems to be operationalised as ‘doing
what you want’ without taking the other person into consideration With
such freedom comes a climate of unhappiness where, as the then president
Thabo Mbeki noted in 2007, ‘communities live in fear, closeted behind walls
and barbed wire, ever anxious in their houses, on the streets and on our roads,
unable freely to enjoy our public spaces’
Likewise, the principle of equality is distorted Violent crime offenders have
become more equal than others through their disregard for the dignity or
property of others and for (often) escaping punishment for their crimes
Efforts to bring down the rate of certain crimes, such as theft, and to build the
democratic South African state, are complicated by widespread poverty and
the lack of equal opportunity
Let us turn our attention to ethical issues in persuasion
1.4 PERSUASION AND ETHICS
Ethical issues in persuasion focus on value judgements concerning right and
wrong, or goodness and badness While knowledge of what is right and wrong
is highly problematic, society often teaches us what is right and what is wrong
Throughout history, two macro theories that relate to the study of ethics,
which is the study of moral conduct, have prevailed: teleological and
deontological
Teleological theories focus on consequences, that is, an action (persuasion)
being right or wrong depends on its consequences, irrespective of how the
action was carried out A pragmatic and utilitarian tendency thus prevails
For example, if you punish a learner more harshly than is necessary for not
studying for a test during the year and it has the desired result that he/she
passes the examination at the end of the year, then your persuasive action,
teleologically speaking, would be regarded as ethical
Trang 35Deontological theories, by contrast, deal with the duties of the participants in
the action (persuasion) For example, it would be ethically wrong for a
Christian person to try to persuade someone to kill another person, thus
going against the Ten Commandments
The process of persuasive communication always carries with it potential
ethical issues, because it:
• involves a persuader (communicator) trying to influence a recipient or a
group of recipients by forming, sustaining or changing his/her or their
attitudes or behaviour
• concerns consciously choosing from among a group of sought objectives
and using persuasive means to achieve those objectives
• necessarily involves a potential judge – any or all of the recipients, the
persuader or an independent observer (Johannesen, 2013:41–42)
Although the relationship between persuasion and ethics is problematic,
three general principles can be posited (cf Bostrom, 1983:14):
• Persuasion can be employed to ethical or non-ethical ends
• Persuasion is used by many types of people, who may or may not have
respect for ethics However, knowledge of persuasive processes is useful in
defending yourself against unscrupulous practitioners
• Ethical issues are often relative, as they can allow for several acceptable
answers The way in which the persuader, persuadee or observer evaluates
the ethics of a persuasive practice depends on the kind of approach
adopted, which in turn is most often governed by the predominating
cultural values
1.4.1 Ethical persuasion: A question of approach and culture
A number of approaches can be adopted when deciding whether persuasion
has been ethical or not (Benoit & Benoit, 2008:45ff.; cf Johannesen, 2013)
For example, a human nature perspective on ethics assesses behaviour as
ethical when the essence of human nature is preserved – such as allowing
recipients to make rational decisions A legal approach requires comparing
current laws and regulations with the persuasive techniques used In South
Africa, it is illegal and thus unethical to make direct comparisons between
commercial products in advertisements One may not advertise that a certain
(named) soft drink is better than another (named) soft drink A religious
approach may involve judging persuasion in terms of the use of lies, slander
and bearing false witness – which the Bible forbids A situational approach (or
relativism), which focuses on contextual factors to determine an ethical
evaluation, may involve matters such as whether urgency justifies the means
used by the persuader
Trang 36The most important point is that ethics is related to culture, and thus good
human conduct (persuasion) in one culture may be regarded as bad behaviour
in another culture
The concept of culture has different meanings At first, culture denoted a
noun of process: the culture (cultivation) of crops or the culture (rearing and
breeding) of animals In the late 18th century it became, especially in German
and English, ‘a noun of configuration or generalisation of the “spirit” which
informed the “whole way of life” of a distinct people’ (Williams, 1981:10)
The term evolved from the older emphasis on an ‘informing spirit’ – ideal or
religious or national – to a more modern emphasis on a ‘lived culture’, which
has been determined mainly by ‘designated social processes – usually
particular kinds of political or economic order’ (Williams, 1981:11)
According to Williams (1983:43–52), there are three definitions of culture:
1 The ideal definition, in which culture is ‘a state or process of human
perfection, in terms of certain absolute or universal values’
2 The documentary definition, which describes culture as the ‘body of
intellectual and imaginative work, in which, in a detailed way, human
thought and experience are variously recorded’
3 The social definition, in which culture is ‘a description of a particular way
of life, which expresses certain meanings and values not only in art and
learning but also in institutions and ordinary behaviour’
This book adopts Williams’s (1983) social definition of culture as ‘a whole way
of life’ of a given human group, or as Maletzke (1976:409) puts it, ‘the
distinctive way of life of a group of people, their designs for living’ This
definition enables us to deal with ethical issues that emanate from the values
implicit and explicit in a particular way of life found here and now in society,
and that find expression in the process of persuasion
In situating the relevance of culture for ethics and persuasion in
communicological terms, we may say that the goodness or badness of
persuasive communication is often influenced by the social circumstances
(culture) in which the process of persuasion takes place
Judgement with regard to the ethical nature of persuasion may operate
ideologically as well Would not a Marxist regard persuasive communication
in the service of capitalism as unethical?
Possibly the most clear-cut statement that we can make about the ethics of
persuasion is that persuasion is ethical in so far as it is an alternative to force,
Trang 37coercion or violence for purposes of producing a community of minds about a
given subject
1.5 RESISTANCE TO PERSUASION
This chapter has focused on the concepts of communication, persuasion and
democracy, as well as on the ethics of persuasion Persuasion, as a process of
communication, is the lifeblood of a modern democracy, a society in which it
is most relevant This is because a democratic social system, as argued, does
not rely predominantly on the use of force or coercion – as authoritarian
societies tend to do A person has the freedom or the right to choose whether
he/she wants to be persuaded by others In other words, a person in a
democratic society is theoretically quite capable of resisting persuasive efforts
There are various ways in which the potential persuadee may resist persuasive
attempts The recipient can ignore, rebut or reject outright the arguments of
the communicator The recipient may also intellectualise, supplant and
generally rationalise the information with which he/she does not agree, or
deny that the information is important when he/she perceives it as a threat to
his/her own position
A further, widely used way of protecting individuals against persuasive ideas
is proposed by McGuire (1961) He suggests that you can be ‘inoculated’
against persuasive attempts (McGuire, 1961) In this context, inoculation
essentially means exposing people to arguments against their attitudes and
then refuting those arguments Thus, having heard various arguments against
their attitudes demolished, individuals may be better equipped to withstand
later attempts at persuasion For example, in a speech presented to his/her
constituents, a political party candidate may first list all the so-called good
points that his/her opponents are making The candidate then breaks down
these points, clarifying for the constituents what they are to argue when
confronted with opposing views In effect, the candidate has attempted to
inoculate his/her constituents against the political arguments of opposing
candidates
The foregoing techniques that relate to resisting unwanted attempts at
persuasion in a democratic society presuppose that much of the population
has a social consciousness and self-consciousness of persuasion Where social
consciousness and self-consciousness of persuasion are lacking, we may
suggest guidelines for creating such consciousness
Trang 381.5.1 Creating a social consciousness and self-consciousness
of persuasion
For a social consciousness of persuasion to be created, persuasion must
capture people’s attention and awaken their interest In other words, people
must form their own mental image of the state of affairs brought about by the
nature and scope of persuasion In forming this mental image, three
dimensions of a social consciousness of persuasion can be posited Each is
coupled with a motif and leads to a clearer understanding of the persuasion
phenomenon These dimensions and their concomitant motifs are derived
from Berger (1963) Such a social consciousness of persuasion could trigger
the start of self-knowledge, for self-knowledge also entails knowledge of the
circumstances in which you find yourself
The first dimension of a social consciousness of persuasion is characterised by
the debunking motif Here a person is interested in looking some distance
beyond the commonly accepted, popular or officially defined goals of human
actions It presupposes a certain awareness that human events have different
levels of meaning, some of which are hidden from the consciousness of
everyday life Or it may even presuppose a measure of suspicion about the way
in which human events, whatever they may be, are officially interpreted by
those in power, or accepted by most people It is, in short, a person’s attempt
to ‘see through’ communicative interactions
The second dimension of a social consciousness of persuasion incorporates
the motif of unrespectability Here ‘unrespectability’ means that a person, in
appraising communicative interactions in democratic society, judges these
interactions not only from the world of middle-class respectability, which is
most often regarded as the ‘best’ view of the world (the one that should be
taken seriously), but also from the perspective of other or ‘unrespectable’
views in society A person should thus, in some measure, be detached from
the taken-for-granted postures of communicative interactions and be involved
in a holistic evaluation of the situation
The third dimension of a social consciousness of persuasion is characterised
by the relativising motif Technological innovation and the growth of the mass
media, including social media, have provided people with insight into other
cultures and their communicative interactions This exposure has led to a
form of cultural imperialism through which the receiving culture has come to
accept many of the cultural products (including the communicative
techniques) of the sending culture, even though fundamentally these cultures
represent contradictory meaning systems Through the motif of relativising,
people acknowledge that not only identities but also ideas are relative to
specific social circumstances
Trang 39Having established a social consciousness of persuasion, it is then imperative
that the individual alone must determine his/her place within his/her
circumstances (within the persuasion milieus) In other words, the individual
must determine the implications of his/her circumstances – the implications
of persuasion – for his/her own existence
This is partly what Mills (1959) has in mind in his concept of the sociological
imagination (or the communicological imagination – Mills [1959:19] suggests
that it does not matter whether ‘sociological’ is replaced with another term)
The communicological imagination is a ‘quality of mind’ or ‘mental attitude’
(Jansen, 1980:31) that helps the individual to understand persuasion, among
other things, in terms of its meaning for his/her own life and for other people
Mills (1959:5ff.) believes that the individual can understand his/her experience
and gauge his/her fate only by locating him-/herself within, among other
things, the persuasion milieus This must be done before he/she can help
others to understand their circumstances In short, Mills (1959) advocates a
form of self-consciousness that promises an understanding of the intimate
realities of ourselves in connection with larger realities, such as persuasion
In the next chapter, persuasive communication is situated in its historical
context
Trang 40A REMINDER
• Persuasion is a process of communication
• Persuasion is both an art and a science
• Persuasion is most relevant in democratic society
• Persuasion can be used for ethical and non-ethical purposes
• McGuire’s (1961) inoculation theory explains how potential
persuadees can come to resist persuasive attempts