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Transborder Media Spaces offers a new perspective on how media
forms like photography, video, radio, television, and the Internet
have been appropriated by Mexican indigenous people in the light of
transnational migration and ethnopolitical movements. In producing
and consuming self-determined media genres, actors in Tamazulapam
Mixe and its diaspora community in Los Angeles open up media spaces
and seek to forge more equal relations both within Mexico and
beyond its borders. It is within these spaces that Ayuujk people
carve out their own, at times conflicting, visions of development,
modernity, gender, and what it means to be indigenous in the
twenty-first century.
Transborder Media Spaces offers a new perspective on how media
forms like photography, video, radio, television, and the Internet
have been appropriated by Mexican indigenous people in the light of
transnational migration and ethnopolitical movements. In producing
and consuming self-determined media genres, actors in Tamazulapam
Mixe and its diaspora community in Los Angeles open up media spaces
and seek to forge more equal relations both within Mexico and
beyond its borders. It is within these spaces that Ayuujk people
carve out their own, at times conflicting, visions of development,
modernity, gender, and what it means to be indigenous in the
twenty-first century.
"Transatlantic Caribbean" widens the scope of research on the
Caribbean by focusing on its transatlantic interrelations with
North America, Latin America, Europe and Africa and by
investigating long-term exchanges of people, practices and ideas.
Based on innovative approaches and rich empirical research from
anthropology, history and literary studies the contributions
discuss border crossings, south-south relations and diasporas in
the areas of popular culture, religion, historical memory as well
as national and transnational social and political movements. These
perspectives enrich the theoretical debates on transatlantic
dialogues and the Black Atlantic and emphasize the Caribbean's
central place in the world.
Historical photographs taken in Latin America have now become key
sites for memory politics, ethnographic imagination, and the
negotiation of identity. This volume opens up a set of questions
relating to the contemporaneous agency of images as well as their
current appropriation via new technologies. Case studies of
pictures taken in Mexico, Colombia, Peru and Brazil analyze these
processes by tracing how the images have been resignified over time
and space. The contributions examine photographs that have been
recently rediscovered by such diverse actors as European museums,
human rights organizations, anthropologists, shamans, local
historians, and communities of internet users.
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