Full Description
In Indigenous Media in Mexico, Erica Cusi Wortham explores the use of video among indigenous peoples in Mexico as an important component of their social and political activism. Funded by the federal government as part of its "pluriculturalist" policy of the 1990s, video indÍgena programs became social processes through which indigenous communities in Oaxaca and Chiapas engendered alternative public spheres and aligned themselves with local and regional autonomy movements. Drawing on her in-depth ethnographic research among indigenous mediamakers in Mexico, Wortham traces their shifting relationship with Mexican cultural agencies; situates their work within a broader, hemispheric network of indigenous media producers; and complicates the notion of a unified, homogeneous indigenous identity. Her analysis of projects from community-based media initiatives in Oaxaca to the transnational Chiapas Media Project highlights variations in cultural identity and autonomy based on specific histories of marginalization, accommodation, and resistance.
Contents
Illustrations ix
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction. Making Culture Visible: Indigenous Media in Mexico 1
Part 1. Broader Contexts for Situating Video Indígena
1. Global and National Contexts of Video Indígena 25
2. Inventing Video Indígena: Transferring Audiovisual Media to Indigenous Organizations and Communities 58
Part 2. Indigenous Media Organizations in Oaxaca
3. Regional Dimensions: Video Indígena beyond State Sponsorship 93
4. Dilemmas in Making Culture Visible: Achieving Community Embeddedness in Tamazulapam del Espíritu Santo, Mixe 130
Part 3. Points of Comparison
5. Revolutionary Indigenous Media: The Chiapas Media Project/Promedios 177
6. Conclusions: Indigenous Media on the International Stage 207
Notes 223
References 243
Index 261
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