Book of the Year, Global Communication and Social Change Division of the International Communication Association (ICA), 2019 UCT Book Award (University of Cape Town), 2020
"Wassermans book offers a rich and insightful account of the South African media in the context of shifting centres of global power and knowledge production. While focusing on the South African transition, the book demonstrates the close interrelationship between the local and the global, between the dominance of the advanced democracies of the West and the struggles of the Global South for recognition and influence. By taking the perspective of the Global South, familiar concepts such as citizenship, tabloidization, and mediation are put in a new light, thus enriching our theoretical and empirical understanding of the role of the media in a changing world."--Katrin Voltmer, author of Comparing Political Communication across Time and Space: New Studies in an Emerging Field "Wasserman's book would surely be deemed as one of the most powerful articulations from the Global South, urging media professionals and scholars to rethink and recontextualize global journalism in this post-West, post-order, post-truth world."--Anbin Shi, Tsinghua University "Wasserman shines a bright light on the changing media's role and journalism practice during the transition to democracy in South Africa....A must-read for all who want to understand South Africa's embrace of democracy and the political economy of communication therein." --The Journalist "The strength of this book is not only that Herman Wasserman gives us a comprehensive overview of the major changes in South Africa's journalism industries since the transition to democracy, but that he does it through the theoretical lens of Global South thinking." --Journal of Asian and African Studies