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Title Indigenous screen cultures in Canada / edited by Sigurjón Baldur Hafsteinsson and Marian Bredin
Published Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada : University of Manitoba Press, [2010]
©2010

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Description 1 online resource (202 pages) : illustrations
Contents Introduction / Marian Bredin and Sigurjón Baldur Hafsteinsson -- The cultural history of Aboriginal media in Canada -- First peoples' television in Canada : origins of the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network / Lorna Roth -- Clear signals : learning and maintaining Aboriginal languages through television / Jennifer David -- APTN and indigenous screen cultures -- Aboriginal journalism practices as deep democracy :APTN National News / Sigurjón Baldur Hafsteinsson -- APTN and its audiences / Marian Bredin -- Aboriginal media on the move : an outside perspective on APTN / Kerstin Knopf -- Regina's Moccasin flats :a landmark in the mapping of urban Aboriginal culture and identity / Christine Ramsay -- Transforming technologies and emerging media circuits -- Co-producing First Nations' narratives :the journals of Knud Rasmussen / Doris Baltruschat -- Wearing the white man's shoes :two worlds in cyberspace / Mike Patterson -- Taking a stance :Aboriginal media research as an act of empowerment / Yvonne Poitras Pratt
Summary Who has the power to narrate and the power to suppress indigenous narratives? Are indigenous media representations themselves appropriate? What is the role of indigenous media in striking a balance between external interests and local constituencies? Indigenous Screen Cultures in Canada explores these key questions and undertakes a critical examination of the history and role of indigenous media organizations, content, and audiences in Canada and their growing importance in domestic and global movements for information democracy. Drawing upon work in anthropology, sociology, media studies, and Native studies, the book investigates the political economy of contemporary indigenous television, film, and cyber production. Focussing primarily on Aboriginal television and the first ten years of the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, the authors also examine indigenous language broadcasting in radio and film; Aboriginal journalism practices; audience creation within and beyond indigenous communities; the roles of program scheduling and content acquisition policies in the decolonization process; the roles of digital video technologies and co-production agreements in indigenous filmmaking; and the emergence of Aboriginal cyber-communities. Each chapter provides concrete examples of how mass media permits increasing cultural and social agency among indigenous groups and how Aboriginal producers conceive of traditional knowledge, language, and practices as vehicles of modern culture
Notes Publisher's Web site: http://uofmpress.ca
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 183-199)
Notes Issued also in print format
English
Online resource; title from PDF version (Library and Archives Canada Electronic Collection, viewed January 6, 2022)
Subject Indian motion pictures -- Canada
Indigenous peoples and mass media -- Canada
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Media Studies.
Indigenous peoples and mass media
Indian motion pictures
Canada
Genre/Form Electronic books
Form Electronic book
Author Sigurjón Baldur Hafsteinsson, editor.
Bredin, Marian, 1961- editor.
ISBN 9780887553998
0887553990
1283091453
9781283091459
9786613091451
6613091456