Cultural Resiliency and the Rise of Indigenous Media: Book Review of "The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication" by Valerie Alia

Valerie Alia’s book, The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication (New York: Berghahn Books, 2012, 270 pp.), points the way to major communication breakthroughs for traditional communities around the world, in turn fostering a more democratic media discourse. From Canada to Japa...

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Main Author: Moscato, Derek
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Western CEDAR 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cedar.wwu.edu/journalism_facpubs/10
https://cedar.wwu.edu/context/journalism_facpubs/article/1009/viewcontent/Moscato_MandC_book_review__2016.pdf
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author Moscato, Derek
author_facet Moscato, Derek
author_sort Moscato, Derek
collection Western Washington University: CEDAR (Contributing to Education through Digital Access to Research)
description Valerie Alia’s book, The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication (New York: Berghahn Books, 2012, 270 pp.), points the way to major communication breakthroughs for traditional communities around the world, in turn fostering a more democratic media discourse. From Canada to Japan, and Australia to Mexico, this ambitious and wide-reaching work examines a broad international movement that at once protects ancient languages and customs but also communicates to audiences across countries, oceans, and political boundaries. The publication is divided roughly into five sections: The emergence of a global vision for Indigenous communities scattered around the world; government policy obstacles and opportunities; lessons from Canada, where Indigenous media efforts have been particularly dynamic; the global surge in television, radio and other technological media advances; and finally the longterm prospects and aspirations for Indigenous media. By laying out such a comprehensive groundwork for the rise of global Indigenous media over a variety of formats, particularly over the past century, Alia shows how recent social media breakthroughs such as the highly successful #IdleNoMore movement—a sustained online protest by Canada’s First Nations peoples—have been in fact inevitable. The world’s Indigenous communities have leveraged media technologies to overcome geographic isolation, to foster new linkages with Indigenous populations globally, and ultimately to mitigate structural power imbalances exacerbated by non-Indigenous media and other institutions.
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spelling ftwestwashington:oai:cedar.wwu.edu:journalism_facpubs-1009 2025-05-18T14:02:06+00:00 Cultural Resiliency and the Rise of Indigenous Media: Book Review of "The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication" by Valerie Alia Moscato, Derek 2016-04-26T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://cedar.wwu.edu/journalism_facpubs/10 https://cedar.wwu.edu/context/journalism_facpubs/article/1009/viewcontent/Moscato_MandC_book_review__2016.pdf English eng Western CEDAR https://cedar.wwu.edu/journalism_facpubs/10 https://cedar.wwu.edu/context/journalism_facpubs/article/1009/viewcontent/Moscato_MandC_book_review__2016.pdf Journalism Faculty Publications First nations Globalization Native American New media Communication Technology and New Media Journalism Studies text 2016 ftwestwashington 2025-04-28T03:27:37Z Valerie Alia’s book, The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication (New York: Berghahn Books, 2012, 270 pp.), points the way to major communication breakthroughs for traditional communities around the world, in turn fostering a more democratic media discourse. From Canada to Japan, and Australia to Mexico, this ambitious and wide-reaching work examines a broad international movement that at once protects ancient languages and customs but also communicates to audiences across countries, oceans, and political boundaries. The publication is divided roughly into five sections: The emergence of a global vision for Indigenous communities scattered around the world; government policy obstacles and opportunities; lessons from Canada, where Indigenous media efforts have been particularly dynamic; the global surge in television, radio and other technological media advances; and finally the longterm prospects and aspirations for Indigenous media. By laying out such a comprehensive groundwork for the rise of global Indigenous media over a variety of formats, particularly over the past century, Alia shows how recent social media breakthroughs such as the highly successful #IdleNoMore movement—a sustained online protest by Canada’s First Nations peoples—have been in fact inevitable. The world’s Indigenous communities have leveraged media technologies to overcome geographic isolation, to foster new linkages with Indigenous populations globally, and ultimately to mitigate structural power imbalances exacerbated by non-Indigenous media and other institutions. Text First Nations Western Washington University: CEDAR (Contributing to Education through Digital Access to Research) Canada
spellingShingle First nations
Globalization
Native American
New media
Communication Technology and New Media
Journalism Studies
Moscato, Derek
Cultural Resiliency and the Rise of Indigenous Media: Book Review of "The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication" by Valerie Alia
title Cultural Resiliency and the Rise of Indigenous Media: Book Review of "The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication" by Valerie Alia
title_full Cultural Resiliency and the Rise of Indigenous Media: Book Review of "The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication" by Valerie Alia
title_fullStr Cultural Resiliency and the Rise of Indigenous Media: Book Review of "The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication" by Valerie Alia
title_full_unstemmed Cultural Resiliency and the Rise of Indigenous Media: Book Review of "The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication" by Valerie Alia
title_short Cultural Resiliency and the Rise of Indigenous Media: Book Review of "The New Media Nation: Indigenous Peoples and Global Communication" by Valerie Alia
title_sort cultural resiliency and the rise of indigenous media: book review of "the new media nation: indigenous peoples and global communication" by valerie alia
topic First nations
Globalization
Native American
New media
Communication Technology and New Media
Journalism Studies
topic_facet First nations
Globalization
Native American
New media
Communication Technology and New Media
Journalism Studies
url https://cedar.wwu.edu/journalism_facpubs/10
https://cedar.wwu.edu/context/journalism_facpubs/article/1009/viewcontent/Moscato_MandC_book_review__2016.pdf