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Aboriginal Cultural Capital Creation and Radio Production in Urban Ontario top
Kathleen Buddle Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 30, No. 1, 2005, pp. 7-39. Challenges the common assumption that there is a direct link between the production and expression of ideas and and a new social order; "article highlights the interdependence of Aboriginal public spheres, radio mediation, and popular sovereignty." More information... (Rating: 5.00, Votes: 3, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
"Allowing the Listener to Fly as They Want to": Sámi Perspectives on Indigenous CD Production in Northern Europe
Beverley Diamond The World of Music, Vol. 49, No. 1, Indigenous Peoples, Recording Techniques, and the Recording Industry, 2007, pp. 23-48. Interviews producers and recording artists who record traditional music and the unique ways Sámi values are incorporated. More information... (Rating: 3.75, Votes: 4, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Below the Hamelin Line: CKRZ and Aboriginal Cultural Survival top
Charles Fairchild Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 23, No. 2, 1998, pp. [163-?]. Examines the evolution and development of the radio station serving First Nations in Southwestern Ontario and evaluates its success as a viable community institution. More information... (Rating: 5.00, Votes: 3, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Community-Based Indigenous Digital Storytelling With Elders and Youth
Judy Iseke, Sylvia Moore American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 35, No. 4, 2011, pp. 19-38. Examines four digital storytelling projects including exploring strategies for creating and designing digital stories. More information... (Rating: 4.09, Votes: 11, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Contemporary Dynamics of Sámi Media in the Nordic States
Lia Markelin, Charles Husband Media International Australia Incorporating Culture and Policy, No. 149, Indigenous Media Practice, November 2013, pp. 70-81. Comments on the challenges of developing a Sami mediascape due to diversity in language, culture, and area of residence. More information... (Rating: 4.29, Votes: 14, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Co-op Healthy Foods Corner and Meal Packages: A Partnership Among Community Members, a Grocery Store, and Community Radio in Pangnirtung, Nunavut top
Cassandra Racicot-Matta, Markus Wilcke, Oleepika Nashalik, Grace Egeland International Journal of Indigenous Health, Vol. 9, No. 2, Inuit Health and Well-Being, 2012, pp. 76-79. Looks at a successful program that provided frozen uncooked nutritional country foods packaged to feed two to four people at a price point lower than commercially prepared frozen dinners. NOTE: Also published as Journal of Aboriginal Health, Summer, 2015. More information... (Rating: 5.00, Votes: 5, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Culture and Media Use in Saskatchewan Indian Country top
Joël Demay Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 16, No. 3, 1991, p. [?]. Reports findings of survey of 246 people about usage of television, radio and newspapers. More information... (Rating: 5.00, Votes: 9, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Dimensions of Indigenous Journalism Culture: Exploring Māori News-Making in Aotearoa New Zealand
Folker Hanusch Journalism, Vol. 15, No. 8, 2014, pp. 951-967. Looks at Māori journalism culture by examining two current affairs programs, one on radio and one in a magazine. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
The Distant Beat of My Father’s Drums: Contemporary Aboriginal Music and NCI-FM Broadcasting, Manitoba, Canada
John C. Lehr, Julie Bartlett, Jeff Tabvahtah GeoJournal, Vol. 65, No. 1-2, February 2006, pp. 79-90. Profile of the Aboriginal-owned and operated radio station and its role in broadcasting music to the Aboriginal community. More information... (Rating: 4.64, Votes: 14, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Health of Native People of North America: An Annotated Mediagraphy, Part II.
Sharon A. Gray MC Journal, Vol. 6, No. 1, Spring, 1998, p. [?]. Update to Part I, covers resources produced in Canada and the United States between 1993 and 1996. More information... (Rating: 4.00, Votes: 5, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
The History of CBC Northern Service Broadcast Recordings
Perry Linttell Canadian Journal of Native Studies, Vol. 8, No. 2, 1988, pp. 291-293. Notes on talent discovery, recording techniques and the broadcasting of Inuit and other Aboriginal performers. More information... (Rating: 3.13, Votes: 8, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
In Doig People's Ears: Portrait of a Changing Community in Sound
Robin Ridington Anthropologica, Vol. 25, No. 1, New Series, Native North Americans and the Media: Studies in Minority Journalism, 1983, pp. 9-21. Comments on an archive of audio tapes which document the process of transition from a life based on hunting and trapping to one which is integrated into the modern industrial economy. More information... (Rating: 4.00, Votes: 5, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
The Incident at Oka: Canadian Aboriginal Issues Move to the Front Burner
Daniel Lavery, Brad Morse Aboriginal Law Bulletin, Vol. 2, No. 48, 1991, p. 6. Discusses the 1990 blockade of a minor country road in Oka, Quebec, which slowly became a national crisis. More information... (Rating: 4.38, Votes: 8, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Journalism in Indian Country: Story Telling That Makes Sense
Sharon M. Murphy The Howard Journal of Communications, Vol. 21, No. 4, Special Issue: Special Forum: American Indians and the Media, 2010, pp. 328-344. Looks at Native American journalism from 1828 starting with Cherokee Phoenix, the first Aboriginal published newspaper to Aboriginal owned and operated radio stations by the mid-1970s. More information... (Rating: 3.75, Votes: 8, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
The Listener: Remembering The Dane-zaa Soundscape Recordings of Howard Broomfield
Robin Ridington, Jillian Ridington BC Studies, No. 193, Summer, 2017, pp. 147-161. Discusses the importance of audio recordings and describes work done with First Nations in British Columbia ; the recordings have now been digitized, compiled and mounted online as part of the Ridington/Dane-zaa audio archive. Gives descriptions of a random sample of archive's content. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Māori Sport and Māori in Sport: Mass Media Representations and Pākehā Discourse
Tim McCreanor, Jenny Rankine, Angela Moewaka Barnes, Belinda Borell, Ray Nairn, Mandi Gregory, Hector Kaiwai AlterNative, Vol. 6, No. 3, 2010, pp. 235-247. Discusses the role of sport within both Māori and Pākehā cultures and the media's tendency in mainstream journalism to promote Pākehā perspectives. More information... (Rating: 0.00, Votes: 0, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Methodological Approaches to Native American Narrative and the Role of Performance
Randall T. G. Hill American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 21, No. 1, Winter, 1997, pp. 111-147. Analyzes the emergence of performance-based methods to examine narratives in which performance itself is a feature. More information... (Rating: 3.57, Votes: 7, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Mohawk Airwaves and Cultural Challenges: Some Reflections on the Politics of Recognition and Cultural Appropriation After Summer of 1990 top
Lorna Roth Canadian Journal of Communication, Vol. 18, No. 3, [Crossing Borders: Issues in Native Communications], [Summer], 1993, pp. [315-331]. Examines the phone-in community radio service of Kahnawake in light of the confrontational summer of 1990. More information... (Rating: 5.00, Votes: 5, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Native Americans in Cold War Public Diplomacy: Indian Politics, American History, and the US Information Agency top
Andrew Denson American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 36, No. 2, 2012, pp. 1-21. Comments on the agency responsible for explaining American politics and life to a worldwide audience during the Cold War. More information... (Rating: 5.00, Votes: 5, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Native Language Broadcasting: An Experiment in Empowerment
J. B. Minore, M. E. Hill The Canadian Journal of Native Studies, Vol. 10, No. 1, 1990, pp. 97-119. Argues that the Northern Native Broadcast Access Program has the potential to empower communities by responding to local initiatives, tailoring services for specific needs and creating collaborative relationships. More information... (Rating: 4.38, Votes: 8, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Native Media's Communities
Steven Leuthold American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Vol. 21, No. 2, 1997, pp. 165-195. Argues that through media Indigenous peoples can develop a new sense of community while still maintaining traditional values and communication forms. More information... (Rating: 4.17, Votes: 12, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
The North American Aboriginal Recording Industry
Christopher A. Scales Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 126, No. 499, Winter, 2013, pp. 81-91. Essay examines the aboriginal recording industry and the socio-economic conditions under which recordings are created. More information... (Rating: 4.44, Votes: 9, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Outlaws and Citizens: Indigenous People and the ‘New Media Nation’ top
Valerie Alia International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics, Vol. 5, No. 1 & 2, 2009, p. 39–54. Discusses the evolution of technologies used to restore and create space to preserve languages and cultures while communicating across cultural, political, and geographical boundaries. More information... (Rating: 5.00, Votes: 8, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
A Reading Spectacle For the Nation: The CBC and "Canada Reads"
Danielle Fuller, DeNel Rehberg Sedo Journal of Canadian Studies, Vol. 40, No. 1, Winter, 2006, pp. 5-36. Analysis of the cultural work of the series with particular emphasis on the first three series, including interviews. More information... (Rating: 4.17, Votes: 6, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites
Rethinking Native Music Scholarship top
Lynn Whidden Canadian Journal of Native Studies, Vol. 18, No. 1, 1998, pp. 135-140. Describes the origins of ethnomusicology and considers its future in relation to Aboriginal peoples and their music. More information... (Rating: 5.00, Votes: 6, Reviews: 0) Reviews | Rate It | Add to Favourites |
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