When Ants Move Mountains: Uncovering a Media Theory of Human Agency

Just as Smythe argued communication was the “blindspot of western Marxism,” western communication and media theorizing itself suffers a blind spot, when it places media power in the hands of dictators and captains of industry as if no others might put pen to paper and change history. Meanwhile, t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Patricia W. Elliott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hungarian Communication Studies Association 2016-05-01
Series:KOME: An International Journal of Pure Communication Inquiry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://komejournal.com/files/KOME_PWElliott.pdf
id doaj-92456c83c81c4907a4e3574b26e278d6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-92456c83c81c4907a4e3574b26e278d62020-11-25T01:51:51ZengHungarian Communication Studies AssociationKOME: An International Journal of Pure Communication Inquiry2063-73302016-05-0141506810.17646/KOME.2016.14When Ants Move Mountains: Uncovering a Media Theory of Human AgencyPatricia W. Elliott0University of ReginaJust as Smythe argued communication was the “blindspot of western Marxism,” western communication and media theorizing itself suffers a blind spot, when it places media power in the hands of dictators and captains of industry as if no others might put pen to paper and change history. Meanwhile, theoretical explorations of how media praxis might be understood and employed for emancipation – not subjugation – emerged through the experiences of people in the Global South and Indigenous communities. This article examines and contrasts the theoretical silos, seeking moments of cross-over and synergy between static, top-down conceptualizations of Western mass media theory, and the more people-powered media praxis of colonized people seeking liberation. Building on the literature of differing experiences, the author draws a framework to encompass the full spectrum of media power. Here scholars, policy planners, and media practitioners alike may find common ground from which to recognize and support grassroots media producers as agents of meaningful social change.http://komejournal.com/files/KOME_PWElliott.pdfcommunication theorymedia theorymedia studiescultural studiesGlobal South
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patricia W. Elliott
spellingShingle Patricia W. Elliott
When Ants Move Mountains: Uncovering a Media Theory of Human Agency
KOME: An International Journal of Pure Communication Inquiry
communication theory
media theory
media studies
cultural studies
Global South
author_facet Patricia W. Elliott
author_sort Patricia W. Elliott
title When Ants Move Mountains: Uncovering a Media Theory of Human Agency
title_short When Ants Move Mountains: Uncovering a Media Theory of Human Agency
title_full When Ants Move Mountains: Uncovering a Media Theory of Human Agency
title_fullStr When Ants Move Mountains: Uncovering a Media Theory of Human Agency
title_full_unstemmed When Ants Move Mountains: Uncovering a Media Theory of Human Agency
title_sort when ants move mountains: uncovering a media theory of human agency
publisher Hungarian Communication Studies Association
series KOME: An International Journal of Pure Communication Inquiry
issn 2063-7330
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Just as Smythe argued communication was the “blindspot of western Marxism,” western communication and media theorizing itself suffers a blind spot, when it places media power in the hands of dictators and captains of industry as if no others might put pen to paper and change history. Meanwhile, theoretical explorations of how media praxis might be understood and employed for emancipation – not subjugation – emerged through the experiences of people in the Global South and Indigenous communities. This article examines and contrasts the theoretical silos, seeking moments of cross-over and synergy between static, top-down conceptualizations of Western mass media theory, and the more people-powered media praxis of colonized people seeking liberation. Building on the literature of differing experiences, the author draws a framework to encompass the full spectrum of media power. Here scholars, policy planners, and media practitioners alike may find common ground from which to recognize and support grassroots media producers as agents of meaningful social change.
topic communication theory
media theory
media studies
cultural studies
Global South
url http://komejournal.com/files/KOME_PWElliott.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT patriciawelliott whenantsmovemountainsuncoveringamediatheoryofhumanagency
_version_ 1724995963406254080