Using the example of collaborative indigenous filmmaking of the Zhigneoshi Collective lead by the Arhuaco community of Colombia, this paper explores the power struggles involved in gaining the auto-representation agency by indigenous communities. How do the voiceless gain their voice? What does this voice say, and where is it heard? International media landscape often become the primary distribution ground for such productions, taking audiences from across the cultures on the journey to ‘discover’ the ‘original voice’. This creates new contexts for the complex power relations and fresh definitions of ‘otherness’ in the politics of representation. In such circumstances, what is the legitimacy of self-representation tendencies among the indig...
Focusing on the communities of Eténhiritipa-Pimentel Barbosa of eastern Mato Grosso, Brazil, this ar...
The aim of this article is to reflect on television as amediation for the visibility of indigenous s...
In this essay I argue that new indigenous media practices must be understood within broader Indigeno...
This article explores mainstream ambitions of indigenous filmmakers from the Sierra Nevada de Santa ...
This paper investigates the idea that film might become an efficient way of intercultural communicat...
This paper analyses the emerging trend of transcending the limitations of so-called indigenous cine...
Pondering on the power of cultural preconceptions, this article examines the tension between self-re...
This project report focuses on the complexities, dynamics and impacts of intercultural communication...
This paper investigates the way violence and forced displacement among the indigenous communities of...
A plethora of films and other audiovisual forms is presented annually in various parts of the globe....
This thesis focusses on the contemporary politics of visual representations among the indigenous co...
Since the end of the 1990s and with a greater prominence in this century, the indigenous communities...
This work studies films about indigenous populations made by non-indigenous and indigenous filmmaker...
This article argues that multimodal semiotics can provide an analytical lens through which to critic...
Can filmmaking as a form of intercultural communication serve as an apparatus for self-identificatio...
Focusing on the communities of Eténhiritipa-Pimentel Barbosa of eastern Mato Grosso, Brazil, this ar...
The aim of this article is to reflect on television as amediation for the visibility of indigenous s...
In this essay I argue that new indigenous media practices must be understood within broader Indigeno...
This article explores mainstream ambitions of indigenous filmmakers from the Sierra Nevada de Santa ...
This paper investigates the idea that film might become an efficient way of intercultural communicat...
This paper analyses the emerging trend of transcending the limitations of so-called indigenous cine...
Pondering on the power of cultural preconceptions, this article examines the tension between self-re...
This project report focuses on the complexities, dynamics and impacts of intercultural communication...
This paper investigates the way violence and forced displacement among the indigenous communities of...
A plethora of films and other audiovisual forms is presented annually in various parts of the globe....
This thesis focusses on the contemporary politics of visual representations among the indigenous co...
Since the end of the 1990s and with a greater prominence in this century, the indigenous communities...
This work studies films about indigenous populations made by non-indigenous and indigenous filmmaker...
This article argues that multimodal semiotics can provide an analytical lens through which to critic...
Can filmmaking as a form of intercultural communication serve as an apparatus for self-identificatio...
Focusing on the communities of Eténhiritipa-Pimentel Barbosa of eastern Mato Grosso, Brazil, this ar...
The aim of this article is to reflect on television as amediation for the visibility of indigenous s...
In this essay I argue that new indigenous media practices must be understood within broader Indigeno...