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Mediating Multiculturalism: Digital Storytelling and the Everyday Ethnic
Hardback

Mediating Multiculturalism: Digital Storytelling and the Everyday Ethnic

$237.99
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This book addresses a historical problem-multiculturalism-using contemporary phenomena: digital storytelling. Mediating Multiculturalism offers an innovative model for reconceptualising cultural difference in a highly mobile and contradictory global moment.

Using digital storytelling-a new media genre that began in California in the late 1990s and that proliferated across ‘the West’ in the 2000s-as a site of analysis, this book asks, ‘What is done in the name of the everyday?’ Like everyday multiculturalism, digital storytelling is promoted as an accessible, enabling, and ordinary phenomenon that represents cultural experience more accurately than official sites. As such, the genre frequently houses stories of migration, community, and ethnic and racial differences. In turn, digital story collections often act as digital monuments or repositories of multiculturalism, giving a digital life to narratives of migration, cultural difference, and national belonging. This is evidenced in one of the world’s largest public collections of digital stories, found in the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) and referenced throughout this book. Using examples from this collection and pointing to comparable ones in the UK and North America, this book investigates how notions of the everyday become a channel through which certain long-standing discourses of race get redeployed in multicultural nations. What can digital storytelling teach us about the status and future of multiculturalism in these societies? Can digital storytelling re-mediate multiculturalism in new, progressive ways?

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Anthem Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
4 August 2020
Pages
232
ISBN
9781785273902

This book addresses a historical problem-multiculturalism-using contemporary phenomena: digital storytelling. Mediating Multiculturalism offers an innovative model for reconceptualising cultural difference in a highly mobile and contradictory global moment.

Using digital storytelling-a new media genre that began in California in the late 1990s and that proliferated across ‘the West’ in the 2000s-as a site of analysis, this book asks, ‘What is done in the name of the everyday?’ Like everyday multiculturalism, digital storytelling is promoted as an accessible, enabling, and ordinary phenomenon that represents cultural experience more accurately than official sites. As such, the genre frequently houses stories of migration, community, and ethnic and racial differences. In turn, digital story collections often act as digital monuments or repositories of multiculturalism, giving a digital life to narratives of migration, cultural difference, and national belonging. This is evidenced in one of the world’s largest public collections of digital stories, found in the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) and referenced throughout this book. Using examples from this collection and pointing to comparable ones in the UK and North America, this book investigates how notions of the everyday become a channel through which certain long-standing discourses of race get redeployed in multicultural nations. What can digital storytelling teach us about the status and future of multiculturalism in these societies? Can digital storytelling re-mediate multiculturalism in new, progressive ways?

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Anthem Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
4 August 2020
Pages
232
ISBN
9781785273902