Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds

This thesis explores how northern Aboriginal girls use media in their daily lives and identity negotiations. Using participatory action research methodologies, namely Photovoice, I examine how a group of Tłįchǫ girls in the isolated community of Behchokö, Northwest Territories engage with and discus...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: MacNeill, Rachel
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/980328/
https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/980328/1/MacNeill_MA_F2015.pdf
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spelling ftconcordiauniv:oai:https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca:980328 2023-05-15T17:46:40+02:00 Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds MacNeill, Rachel 2015-08 text https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/980328/ https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/980328/1/MacNeill_MA_F2015.pdf en eng https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/980328/1/MacNeill_MA_F2015.pdf MacNeill, Rachel (2015) Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds. Masters thesis, Concordia University. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2015 ftconcordiauniv 2022-05-28T19:01:41Z This thesis explores how northern Aboriginal girls use media in their daily lives and identity negotiations. Using participatory action research methodologies, namely Photovoice, I examine how a group of Tłįchǫ girls in the isolated community of Behchokö, Northwest Territories engage with and discuss media, particularly as it relates to their conceptions of themselves and their community. This research demonstrates that participants are deeply engaged with media and the global discourses it transmits. Drawing on critical scholarship in girlhood studies, critical indigenous studies, rurality, resilience and identity studies, I argue that these youth have a tendency to see their traditional culture as inconsistent or incompatible with this media and dominant culture, resulting in a fractured sense of identity. To aid in dealing with this conflicted identity and bolster their self-concepts as strong, resilient people, I argue, participants draw narratives of strength out of the many different types of media they encounter. These narratives of strength contribute to an emergent sense of injustice that relates to global discourses on marginalization, structural racism, and the past, present and future experiences of Aboriginal peoples. Thesis Northwest Territories Spectrum: Concordia University Research Repository (Montreal) Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection Spectrum: Concordia University Research Repository (Montreal)
op_collection_id ftconcordiauniv
language English
description This thesis explores how northern Aboriginal girls use media in their daily lives and identity negotiations. Using participatory action research methodologies, namely Photovoice, I examine how a group of Tłįchǫ girls in the isolated community of Behchokö, Northwest Territories engage with and discuss media, particularly as it relates to their conceptions of themselves and their community. This research demonstrates that participants are deeply engaged with media and the global discourses it transmits. Drawing on critical scholarship in girlhood studies, critical indigenous studies, rurality, resilience and identity studies, I argue that these youth have a tendency to see their traditional culture as inconsistent or incompatible with this media and dominant culture, resulting in a fractured sense of identity. To aid in dealing with this conflicted identity and bolster their self-concepts as strong, resilient people, I argue, participants draw narratives of strength out of the many different types of media they encounter. These narratives of strength contribute to an emergent sense of injustice that relates to global discourses on marginalization, structural racism, and the past, present and future experiences of Aboriginal peoples.
format Thesis
author MacNeill, Rachel
spellingShingle MacNeill, Rachel
Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds
author_facet MacNeill, Rachel
author_sort MacNeill, Rachel
title Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds
title_short Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds
title_full Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds
title_fullStr Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds
title_full_unstemmed Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds
title_sort northern aboriginal girls and their mediated worlds
publishDate 2015
url https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/980328/
https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/980328/1/MacNeill_MA_F2015.pdf
geographic Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
genre Northwest Territories
genre_facet Northwest Territories
op_relation https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/980328/1/MacNeill_MA_F2015.pdf
MacNeill, Rachel (2015) Northern Aboriginal Girls and Their Mediated Worlds. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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