Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Indigenizing Decolonial Media Theory

View through CrossRef
This essay examines how “decolonization” has become a buzzword, arguing that its trajectory follows that of “intersectionality,” another term popularized in media spaces and embraced by white leftist activists both in and outside of the academy. I propose that discursive activism online can be understood through two modes: extractive currency and redistributive currency. Exposing extractive media practices, this essay considers how “decolonization” has become commodified and stripped of its connection to the vital work of Indigenous people, transformed into what I call an “extractive currency” that promotes self-styled white “radical” voices at the expense of Indigenous sovereignty. Decolonial feminist media theory, I suggest, has a crucial role to play in undoing the power of this extractive currency in favor of a redistributive currency by unveiling the role of media in creating it and, instead, centering models of decolonial feminist activism. This exploration of #MMIW, the social media hashtag drawing attention to missing and murdered Indigenous women, demonstrates how media can be used in tactical ways to transform local activism into transnational phenomena while insisting on the need to attend to the ongoing experience of colonial violence, born from Indigenous dispossession and genocide, that threatens the lives of Indigenous women. In this way, I suggest, decolonial feminist media theory has a crucial role to play in reimagining the economies of media activism.
University of California Press
Title: Indigenizing Decolonial Media Theory
Description:
This essay examines how “decolonization” has become a buzzword, arguing that its trajectory follows that of “intersectionality,” another term popularized in media spaces and embraced by white leftist activists both in and outside of the academy.
I propose that discursive activism online can be understood through two modes: extractive currency and redistributive currency.
Exposing extractive media practices, this essay considers how “decolonization” has become commodified and stripped of its connection to the vital work of Indigenous people, transformed into what I call an “extractive currency” that promotes self-styled white “radical” voices at the expense of Indigenous sovereignty.
Decolonial feminist media theory, I suggest, has a crucial role to play in undoing the power of this extractive currency in favor of a redistributive currency by unveiling the role of media in creating it and, instead, centering models of decolonial feminist activism.
This exploration of #MMIW, the social media hashtag drawing attention to missing and murdered Indigenous women, demonstrates how media can be used in tactical ways to transform local activism into transnational phenomena while insisting on the need to attend to the ongoing experience of colonial violence, born from Indigenous dispossession and genocide, that threatens the lives of Indigenous women.
In this way, I suggest, decolonial feminist media theory has a crucial role to play in reimagining the economies of media activism.

Related Results

Power, Position and Practice: Conscientisation and decolonial solidarity of Southeast Asian migrants in Aotearoa
Power, Position and Practice: Conscientisation and decolonial solidarity of Southeast Asian migrants in Aotearoa
<p dir="ltr"><b>Scholars have conceptualised decolonial solidarity through notions of reciprocity, relationality, and mutuality. In Aotearoa New Zealand, constitutional...
James Baldwin's Decolonial Love as Religious Orientation
James Baldwin's Decolonial Love as Religious Orientation
Abstract In this article, I use the concept of decolonial love to synthesize the religious and theological dimensions of James Baldwin's work. I argue that Baldwin's...
Decolonial Theology in the North Atlantic World
Decolonial Theology in the North Atlantic World
Abstract This essay develops a response to the historical situation of the North Atlantic world in general and the United States in particular through theological reflection. It of...
Postcolonial/Decolonial Critique and the Theory of International Relations
Postcolonial/Decolonial Critique and the Theory of International Relations
The article is devoted to the discussion of the role of postcolonial/decolonial critique and its contribution to the theory of international relations. Intersecting with multiple d...
Aesthesis decolonial y los tiempos relacionales Entrevista a Rolando Vázquez
Aesthesis decolonial y los tiempos relacionales Entrevista a Rolando Vázquez
RESUMEN Hay que pensar la decolonialidad en relación a las artes. En esta entrevista exploramos cómo las artes decoloniales se diferencian de la estética moderna/colonial. La decol...
Transdisciplinariedad decolonial de la Educación Matemática
Transdisciplinariedad decolonial de la Educación Matemática
La transdisciplinariedad no siempre es decolonial, ha tenido rezagos modernistas, postmodernistas y de allí coloniales. Desde el proyecto transmodernista, el transparadigma transco...
Decolonial Love
Decolonial Love
This book raises the question of what it means to engage in theological reflection in an authentic way in the present context of global coloniality. In response to the historical m...
Decolonizing Salvation
Decolonizing Salvation
This chapter focuses on theologies of salvation oriented toward liberation in order to establish resources for a decolonized image of salvation, or an image of salvation that unset...

Back to Top