Television, Nation, and Indigenous Media
Source
doi: 10.1177/1527476403259750 Television New Media February 2004 vol. 5 no. 1 7-25
Abstract
Broadcast television has most often been
understood as a site for the narration of unified national identity. But
at the same
time, it has been associated with the development
of diversified cultural citizenship. This article considers some of the
issues arising from situations in which cultural
identities have clashed with national ones, especially the case of
Indigenous
issues on Australian television. The evolution of
new forms of citizenship is matched by post-broadcast forms of
television,
in which audiences can be seen as organized around
choice, affinity, and the production as well as consumption of media.
These
developments have powerful implications for the way
nations are narrated in broadcast television and for our understanding
of how television itself is evolving. The article
argues that Indigeneity points the way to new notions of both nation and
television.
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