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E-book
Author Vargas, Lucila, author.

Title Social uses and radio practices : the use of participatory radio by ethnic minorities in Mexico / Lucila Vargas
Published New York, NY ; Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2019

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Description 1 online resource
Series International communication and popular culture
International communication and popular culture.
Contents Preface -- The Social Value of Participatory Radio -- Introduction -- Methodology -- Indigenous Participation in Production Processes -- Indigenous Peoples and the Instituto Nacional Indigenista -- The INI Network -- The Network's Staff and Other Actors -- The Programming of the INI Network -- Audience Participation and Social Uses -- Radio Margaritas' Target Audience: The Tojolabal Maya -- Exposure, Listening, and Taste -- Social Impact of Radio Margaritas -- Radio and Ethnodevelopment -- Outline of Radio Consumption Patterns -- Participation, Racism, and Social Uses -- Appendixes -- Interview Schedules
Summary Combining concepts and methods from critical cultural studies with the Freirean approach to development, Lucila Vargas examines the social value of participatory radio and the possibilities and constraints that participatory radio stations hold for improving the living conditions and the sense of self-esteem of the poor in Mexico. This book provides an ethnographic account of the social uses of radio created by several Mexican ethnic minorities by examining the matrix of interactions between a government-sponsored participatory radio network and its indigenous audiences. Vargas specifically emphasizes how and why the politics of race, ethnicity, class, and gender shape the extent and quality of people's participation in development efforts, and she also considers the larger issue of the way subaltern ethnic groups appropriate and refunctionalize modem mass technology. This inquiry leads to a method for analyzing the cultural subtleties and social intricacies of the practices that emerge from participatory radio. Through a thorough investigation of two Tojolabal Maya communities in the highlands of Chiapas, Mexico, Vargas reveals the conflicts and challenging contradictions typical of many participatory radio stations. She finds that despite the rampant racism against indigenous peoples prevalent at the radio stations, groups like the Tojolabal Maya have found creative ways to make the best of the communication resources that this participatory project has made available to them
Notes Originally published 1995 by Westview Press
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Vargas, Lucila
On-line resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed July 02, 2019)
Subject Radio in rural development -- Mexico -- Chiapas -- Case studies
Radio broadcasting -- Social aspects -- Mexico -- Chiapas -- Case studies
Radio broadcasting -- Social aspects.
Radio in rural development.
Mexico -- Chiapas.
Genre/Form Case studies.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 0429306458
9780429306457
9781000240078
100024007X
9781000311952
1000311953
9781000276015
1000276015