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Brendan Hokowhitu is dean of the faculty of native studies at the University of Alberta. He is coeditor of Indigenous Identity and Resistance: Researching the Diversity of Knowledge.
List of contents
Contents
MapsIntroduction: The Indigenous Mediascape in Aotearoa/New ZealandBrendan Hokowhitu and Vijay Devadas
I. Mediated Indigeneity: Representing the Indigenous Other1. Governing Indigenous Sovereignty: Biopolitics and the ‘Terror Raids’ in New ZealandVijay Devadas2. Postcolonial Trauma: Child Abuse, Genocide, and Journalism in New ZealandAllen Meek3. Promotional Culture and Indigenous Identity: Trading the OtherJay Scherer4. Viewing against the Grain: Postcolonial Remediation in Rain of the ChildrenKevin Fisher and Brendan Hokowhitu5. Consume or Be Consumed: Targeting M¿ori Consumers in Print MediaSuzanne DuncanII. Indigenous Media: Emergence, Struggles, and Interventions6. Theorizing Indigenous MediaBrendan Hokowhitu7. Te Hokioi and the Legitimization of the M¿ori NationLachy Paterson8. Barry Barclay's Te Rua: The Unmanned Camera and M¿ori Political ActivismApril Strickland9. Reflections on Barry Barclay and Fourth CinemaStephen TurnerIII. M¿ori Television: Nation, Culture, and Identity10. The M¿ori Television Service and Questions of CultureChris Prentice11. M¿ori Television, Anzac Day, and Constructing ‘Nationhood’Sue Abel 12. Indigeneity and Cultural Belonging in Survivor-Styled Reality Television from New ZealandJo Smith and Joost de Bruin
AcknowledgmentsContributorsIndex
About the author
Brendan Hokowhitu is dean of the faculty of native studies at the University of Alberta. He is coeditor of Indigenous Identity and Resistance: Researching the Diversity of Knowledge.