Prix bas
CHF128.80
Impression sur demande - l'exemplaire sera recherché pour vous.
This book brings together twelve contributions that trace the empirical-conceptual evolution of Popular Communication, associating it mainly with the context of inequalities in Latin America and with the creative and collective appropriation of communication and knowledge technologies as a strategy of resistance and hope for marginalized social groups. In this way, even while emphasizing the Latin American and even ancestral identity of this current of thought, this book positions it as an epistemology of the South capable of inspiring relevant reflections in an increasingly unequal and mediatized world. The volume's contributors include both early-career and more established professionals and natives of seven countries in Latin America. Their contributions reflect on the epistemological roots of Popular Communication, and how those roots give rise to a research method, a pedagogy, and a practice, from decolonial perspectives.
Examines a broad range of seminal and often overlooked works that have been constitutive in the Latin American field of media and communication studies Explores how the concept of Communication for Development and Social Change has evolved over the years to arrive at its current theoretical and empirical constructions Acknowledges a diversity of approaches that seeks two overcome classical dichotomies of North and South, local and global
Auteur
Ana Cristina Suzina is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in the Institute for Media and Creative Industries at Loughborough University London. Adalid Contreras Baspinero: Universidad Andina Simón Bolívar, La Paz, Bolivia, and Quito, Ecuador Aníbal Orué Pozzo: Graduate Program on Interdisciplinary Latin-American Studies (IELA), Federal University of Latin-American Integration (UNILA), Foz do Iguaçu, Brazil; Graduate School, East National University (UNE), Ciudad del Este, Paraguay Cicilia M. Krohling Peruzzo: University of State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Federal University of Espírito Santo, Rio de Janeiro and Vitória, Brazil Daniel Prieto Castillo: National University of Cuyo, Mendoza, Argentina Dorismilda Flores-Márquez: Universidad De La Salle Bajío, León, México Jair Vega Casanova: Department of Social Communication, Universidad del Norte, Barranquilla, Colombia Leonardo Custódio: Åbo Akademi University, Turku, Finland María Cristina Mata: National University of Córdoba, Córdoba, Argentina Nívea Canalli Bona: Núcleo de Estudos de Comunicação Comunitária e Local (COMUNI), São Paulo, Brazil Santiago Gómez Obando: Dimensión Educativa, Bogotá, Colombia Washington Uranga: Universidad Nacional de La Plata and Universidad de Buenos Aires, La Plata and Buenos Aires, Argentina
Contenu