Description
Book SynopsisPlace, Power, Media: Mediated Responses to Globalization is a compelling, interdisciplinary exploration of how media practices and communication rituals are connected to larger economic, social, and political processes in a globalizing world. Through a rich variety of media texts, authors examine how daily, mundane, and interpersonal processes help shape our' place in the world, a placement that is integrally connected to social relations at the global level. Denoting a sense of geography as well as demarcating diverse social positionings, place is understood as the result of historical and contemporary discourses occurring on a range of scales and within different cultural, aesthetic, and political contexts. The authors argue that the construction, restoration, configuration, and representation of place is an important project at multiple levels; what meanings are derived from it, what meanings are infused, who the key players are, what power struggles are inherentthese is
Table of Contents
List of Figures – Divya McMillin/Joost de Bruin/Jo Smith: Introduction: Place, Power, Media – Section One: Place Making in the Globalizing City – Linda Jean Kenix: Authenticity and Participation as a Radicalized Tourist Place in Post-earthquake Christchurch – Divya McMillin: Citizen Media and Civic Engagement in Globalizing – Carol-Mei Barker: Shanghai’s Migrant Bodies and Global Spaces: Zhao Dayong’s Street Life (2006) – Section Two: Indigenous Place Making through Media Production and Performance – Jo Smith: Pluralizing Notions of Place through Māori Food TV – Danica Sterud Miller/Puyallup Nation: Anishinaabe Storytelling and the Federal Narrative in Louise Erdrich’s Tracks – Oli Wilson: Revisiting Place and Identity in Indigenous Popular Music: Lokal Stylistic Frameworks in Papua New Guinea – Kimbra L. Smith: ‘Not Alone in the World’: Global Audiences-as-Actors in the Decolonization Process of a Coastal Ecuadorian Indigenous Community – Section Three: Challenging Representations of Place through Media Criticism – Joanne Clarke Dillman: Encountering Nigeria through Mediated Close Encounters: Amina Lawal, Isioma Daniel, and the Miss WorldPageant of 2002 – Athena Elafros: It’s the ‘Great White North’: Nationalism, Identity and Place in Canadian Hip Hop – Joost de Bruin: A New Zealand Television Soap in Fiji: Out of Time, But Firmly in Place – Kristin Shamas: Media Invisibility and a South Lebanese Village – Contributor Biographies.