Table of Contents
Contents
MapsIntroduction: The Indigenous Mediascape in Aotearoa/New Zealand Brendan Hokowhitu and Vijay Devadas
I. Mediated Indigeneity: Representing the Indigenous Other1. Governing Indigenous Sovereignty: Biopolitics and the ‘Terror Raids’ in New Zealand Vijay Devadas2. Postcolonial Trauma: Child Abuse, Genocide, and Journalism in New Zealand Allen Meek3. Promotional Culture and Indigenous Identity: Trading the Other Jay Scherer4. Viewing against the Grain: Postcolonial Remediation in Rain of the Children Kevin Fisher and Brendan Hokowhitu5. Consume or Be Consumed: Targeting Māori Consumers in Print Media Suzanne DuncanII. Indigenous Media: Emergence, Struggles, and Interventions6. Theorizing Indigenous Media Brendan Hokowhitu7. Te Hokioi and the Legitimization of the Māori Nation Lachy Paterson8. Barry Barclay's Te Rua: The Unmanned Camera and Māori Political Activism April Strickland9. Reflections on Barry Barclay and Fourth Cinema Stephen TurnerIII. Māori Television: Nation, Culture, and Identity10. The Māori Television Service and Questions of Culture Chris Prentice11. Māori Television, Anzac Day, and Constructing ‘Nationhood’ Sue Abel 12. Indigeneity and Cultural Belonging in Survivor-Styled Reality Television from New Zealand Jo Smith and Joost de Bruin
AcknowledgmentsContributorsIndex