Indigenous media: Anthropological perspectives and historical notes

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Abstract

Indigenous people have been appropriating media technologies for decades to communicate within and outside their communities, to resist outside domination and for self-determination. This chapter traces developments in the anthropological study of Indigenous media, particularly since the 1990s when research in this field co-contributed to the widening area of media anthropology. After reviewing conceptualizations of cultural activism and social change in the context of Indigenous media engagements, it analyses the Indigenization of media by considering locally specific practices of media appropriation, global processes of identity-making and the technological and infrastructural dimension of media projects. By drawing on ethnographic examples from the anthropological literature and from the author’s fieldwork in Canada, the chapter argues that there is a strong sense of sociopolitical activism and agency in Indigenous people’s collective engagements with media. At the same time, Indigenous people’s media practices are related to mundane necessities of everyday communication, social networking, family bonding or individual self-expression. This chapter concludes that media technologies have become an important part of Indigeneity, as a global idea and as a relational practice of collective identity formation, which coexists with the sense of belonging to a distinct local Indigenous community.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Routledge Companion to Media Anthropology
EditorsElisabetta Costa, Patricial G. Lange, Nell Haynes, Jolynna Sinanan
PublisherRoutledge, Taylor & Francis
Pages33-46
Number of pages14
ISBN (Electronic)9781000643145
ISBN (Print)9781032007762
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 504017 Cultural anthropology
  • 504008 Ethnography
  • 504009 Ethnology

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