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Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Caven Masuku
This is Caven Masuku a Junior lecturer at Midlands State University (MSU) in Gweru Zimbabwe. He is a journalist and writes for "The Sunday News" in the entertainment desk. For more information find him on masuku.caven@gmail.com, masukuc@msu.ac.zw, sukuman08@yahoo.co.uk,sqokoqela@hotmail.com.
Midlands State University theatre arts group
Midlands State University theatre arts group
The Midlands State University (MSU) launched the arts theatre group for Students with disabilities into theatre Arts (IDITA). Brian Ntabeni one of the teaching assistant lecturers at MSU is the co-ordinator of this arts group.
In an interview conducted by Caven Masuku with Ntabeni, it emerged that Ntabeni was born on 6 May 1963 in Filabusi. He did his primary education at Glogg Range in 1972, and later, secondary education at Wanezi Mission and David Livingston in 1982 and 1983. After completing his advanced level he then went to University of Zimbabwe (UZ) in 1984 and 1986, where he obtained a BA General degree majoring in history and isiNdebele with the components of arts theatre. He is also a former headmaster at Sibhata Secondary School.
IDITA is a brainchild of Dr C Pfukwa the Dean in the faculty of arts at MSU. Brain Ntabeni and Muchineripi Gwarinda are the coordinators. Among the disabled students the main actors are JB Dube, Godknows, Tendai Muzondiwa and Tawonavo Chinyoka. IDITA uses arts and theatre, to address socio-economic issues like AIDS, religious and tribal conflict which is a threat to the peaceful wellbeing of society”, said Ntabeni.
“As IDITA arts group singing and dance, beat of drums and jingles are used across the board to communicate issues that affects the society on daily a basis”, said Ntabeni. As a mode of communication this form overcomes barriers of illiteracy.
The Midlands State University theatre arts for the disabled uses Zimbabwe's main languages; English, Shona and isiNdebele in their theatrical productions. Ntabeni has been in the arts theatre for some time and is known for creating Jabulani kuphela Theatre arts group in Matabeleland South.
As a creative artist Ntabeni has authored a book called “Sando the rat” that he forwarded to the Heinemann publishers in London for publishing. In addition, he has just completed a collection of isiNdebele short stories titled, “Ungaludinga uzaluthola” and is looking for a willing publisher locally or in South Africa. He added that the society does not change unless it has to laugh at its own ills. The arts and theatre for the disabled at MSU points at such evils that trouble the society and influence the change of behavior.
Asked whether he has an intention to start his own arts theatre group in Filabusi , Ntabeni said that he is planning to open a cultural village for the disabled in Filabusi. “People with economic muscle do not believe in the work of arts and take theatre lightly, instead of allocating the arts and theatre a space, they prefer a grinding meal”, said Ntabeni. He said that if arts are taken seriously like the church it will make the arts industry grow strong and become a recognized phenomenon.
“Gweru is sleeping in terms of arts, they have a tendency of depending on the outsiders and most artists prefer to move to Harare or Bulawayo”, said Ntabeni. Ntabeni as an artist and a teaching assistant lecturer said that students by virtue of being involved in theatre arts will come to understand better.
This is for the first time that Midlands State University got involved in engaging the disadvantaged in arts and theatre and will enable them to publish their artistic work in brails, added Ntabeni. “I urge all artists in the Midlands to fight hard to earn themselves respect in arts and theatre since nothing comes easy. Otherwise if they do not fight hard they will end up giving us a bubble gum product which blows and does not last”, said Ntabeni
കോര്പ്പറേറ്റ് Giant
This story is taken from CNN and indicates the enormous power developed by conglomerate organization in Europe in monopolizing the global market
STORY HIGHLIGHTS. Caven Masuku a lecturer at Midlands State University from Gweru, Zimbabwe teachers Global Media structures and is a Journalist who have keen interest in finding out what is currently happening with conglomerate and global media agencies. he can be contacted on masuku.caven@gmail.com
* Dispute over e-book prices between Amazon, publisher a power play, says Barry C. Lynn
* Lynn: Government has stressed lower prices while allowing growth of powerful retailers
* He says the cost of the policy has been domination of retailers over suppliers
RELATED TOPICS
* Amazon.com Inc.
* Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
* Monopolies
Editor's note: Barry C. Lynn is author of "Cornered: The New Monopoly Capitalism and the Economics of Destruction" (Wiley). He is a senior fellow and director of the Markets, Enterprise and Resiliency Initiative at the New America Foundation.
(CNN) -- Late in January, the book publisher Macmillan told Amazon it wanted to raise the prices of its books sold through the online retailer. Amazon made clear it wanted to continue to set prices for Macmillan's books, as it does for most books it sells.
To make sure the publisher understood it was serious, Amazon cut the links that enable people to buy Macmillan's books via Amazon's Web site. For more than a week, you could still see Macmillan books on Amazon; you just couldn't order one.
Even though the two companies have since struck a truce, the showdown should deeply concern anyone who cares not merely about the health of this vital industry, but about concentration of political power in America.
What should concern us foremost is not that Amazon's managers believe they -- rather than the people who write and edit our books -- have a right to set the price for books. It is that Amazon's managers believe they have consolidated sufficient power -- the company sells as much as 80 percent of all ebooks, for instance -- to enforce their will by cutting off the public's access to a publisher's books.
More disturbing yet, Amazon is not alone in having captured such a position. Another company that has captured a real say over the actions of our publishers is Wal-Mart. And Wal-Mart is a goliath that has repeatedly used its dominant position to influence the content of products by refusing to sell certain books or music.
Indeed, such brute use of power is increasingly the norm across our economy. As anyone who has studied the business practices of Wal-Mart, Home Depot and Best Buy knows, rough treatment of the people who make what we buy is true in just about every industry.
It was not always this way in America. A generation ago every city boasted its own department stores, discount shops and independent bookstores. Power was so widely distributed that few retailers enjoyed any real power over suppliers.
The consolidation in retail since then is due largely to two revolutions in our anti-monopoly laws. The first was the Consumer Goods Pricing Act of 1975, which gave retailers the power to price other companies' products. Second was the Reagan administration's reframing of our anti-monopoly laws in 1981 around the concept of "consumer welfare."
Until then, the prime purpose of anti-monopoly laws was to protect citizens against concentration of political power. Since then, officials have used our anti-monopoly laws instead to lower prices. To achieve this end, they often virtually promote concentration of power over entire market systems.
As a result, it is now all but routine for big firms, in their efforts to grow bigger and increase profits, to dictate prices to suppliers who depend on them to get to their customers. Such use of power can strip away or destroy much of the cash suppliers would have invested in new products or simply to maintain systems and skills.
There is nothing new in this. A century ago Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes spelled out the dangers in a case in which a retailer manipulated the price of a drug, "I cannot believe," he wrote, "that in the long run the public will profit by this court permitting knaves to cut reasonable prices for some ulterior purpose of their own, and thus to impair, if not to destroy, the production and sale of articles which it is assumed to be desirable that the public be able to get."
In the case of Amazon, consolidation has often been presented as a consequence of new technologies. And it is not entirely clear how we can apply traditional anti-monopoly laws, many of which have geographic components, to online commerce.
But any careful reading of history will carry us to analogous challenges in our past, like those posed by the early railways, and thereby to other potentially useful forms of anti-monopoly law such as common carriage rules. Also, most of Amazon's abuses would have been avoided if the people who make our products (in this case books) still enjoyed complete autonomy to set their own prices.
Amazon acted badly. So too Wal-Mart, especially during last fall's book price war. Yet the fundamental flaw lies not with the decisions made by managers of these companies. It lies with viewing our anti-monopoly laws as a tool to promote a flawed vision of efficiency rather than to protect our most vital liberties.
Defenders of concentration will continue to justify their use of power with claims they are serving the "consumer." But we should be clear that fixation on lowering prices can result in truly dramatic costs.
Sometimes it is degradation of the quality and safety of the products delivered to the American "consumer." Sometimes it is the concentration of power over the people who produce our books and other vital products and over the American citizen.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS. Caven Masuku a lecturer at Midlands State University from Gweru, Zimbabwe teachers Global Media structures and is a Journalist who have keen interest in finding out what is currently happening with conglomerate and global media agencies. he can be contacted on masuku.caven@gmail.com
* Dispute over e-book prices between Amazon, publisher a power play, says Barry C. Lynn
* Lynn: Government has stressed lower prices while allowing growth of powerful retailers
* He says the cost of the policy has been domination of retailers over suppliers
RELATED TOPICS
* Amazon.com Inc.
* Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
* Monopolies
Editor's note: Barry C. Lynn is author of "Cornered: The New Monopoly Capitalism and the Economics of Destruction" (Wiley). He is a senior fellow and director of the Markets, Enterprise and Resiliency Initiative at the New America Foundation.
(CNN) -- Late in January, the book publisher Macmillan told Amazon it wanted to raise the prices of its books sold through the online retailer. Amazon made clear it wanted to continue to set prices for Macmillan's books, as it does for most books it sells.
To make sure the publisher understood it was serious, Amazon cut the links that enable people to buy Macmillan's books via Amazon's Web site. For more than a week, you could still see Macmillan books on Amazon; you just couldn't order one.
Even though the two companies have since struck a truce, the showdown should deeply concern anyone who cares not merely about the health of this vital industry, but about concentration of political power in America.
What should concern us foremost is not that Amazon's managers believe they -- rather than the people who write and edit our books -- have a right to set the price for books. It is that Amazon's managers believe they have consolidated sufficient power -- the company sells as much as 80 percent of all ebooks, for instance -- to enforce their will by cutting off the public's access to a publisher's books.
More disturbing yet, Amazon is not alone in having captured such a position. Another company that has captured a real say over the actions of our publishers is Wal-Mart. And Wal-Mart is a goliath that has repeatedly used its dominant position to influence the content of products by refusing to sell certain books or music.
Indeed, such brute use of power is increasingly the norm across our economy. As anyone who has studied the business practices of Wal-Mart, Home Depot and Best Buy knows, rough treatment of the people who make what we buy is true in just about every industry.
It was not always this way in America. A generation ago every city boasted its own department stores, discount shops and independent bookstores. Power was so widely distributed that few retailers enjoyed any real power over suppliers.
The consolidation in retail since then is due largely to two revolutions in our anti-monopoly laws. The first was the Consumer Goods Pricing Act of 1975, which gave retailers the power to price other companies' products. Second was the Reagan administration's reframing of our anti-monopoly laws in 1981 around the concept of "consumer welfare."
Until then, the prime purpose of anti-monopoly laws was to protect citizens against concentration of political power. Since then, officials have used our anti-monopoly laws instead to lower prices. To achieve this end, they often virtually promote concentration of power over entire market systems.
As a result, it is now all but routine for big firms, in their efforts to grow bigger and increase profits, to dictate prices to suppliers who depend on them to get to their customers. Such use of power can strip away or destroy much of the cash suppliers would have invested in new products or simply to maintain systems and skills.
There is nothing new in this. A century ago Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes spelled out the dangers in a case in which a retailer manipulated the price of a drug, "I cannot believe," he wrote, "that in the long run the public will profit by this court permitting knaves to cut reasonable prices for some ulterior purpose of their own, and thus to impair, if not to destroy, the production and sale of articles which it is assumed to be desirable that the public be able to get."
In the case of Amazon, consolidation has often been presented as a consequence of new technologies. And it is not entirely clear how we can apply traditional anti-monopoly laws, many of which have geographic components, to online commerce.
But any careful reading of history will carry us to analogous challenges in our past, like those posed by the early railways, and thereby to other potentially useful forms of anti-monopoly law such as common carriage rules. Also, most of Amazon's abuses would have been avoided if the people who make our products (in this case books) still enjoyed complete autonomy to set their own prices.
Amazon acted badly. So too Wal-Mart, especially during last fall's book price war. Yet the fundamental flaw lies not with the decisions made by managers of these companies. It lies with viewing our anti-monopoly laws as a tool to promote a flawed vision of efficiency rather than to protect our most vital liberties.
Defenders of concentration will continue to justify their use of power with claims they are serving the "consumer." But we should be clear that fixation on lowering prices can result in truly dramatic costs.
Sometimes it is degradation of the quality and safety of the products delivered to the American "consumer." Sometimes it is the concentration of power over the people who produce our books and other vital products and over the American citizen.
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