Aboriginal digitalities: indigenous peoples and new media

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Files
Digital_aboriginalities.pdf(702.21 KB)
Accepted Version
Date
2016
Authors
de la Garza, Armida
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Published Version
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Abstract
This article goes beyond considerations of digital media supporting identity and community to discuss the ways in which digital technology itself resembles and even parallels traditional indigenous means of producing and sharing knowledge and of experiencing time and space. Drawing from examples ranging from Aztec maps that represented time-space units simultaneously, through discussing indigenous codex and glyphs in which visual language is able to convey meaning using simultaneity rather than chronological narration, to the use of performance for durable cultural storage and transmission, this article points to the many areas of convergence between the multimodal communication that digital media increasingly enable and ancestral practices of indigenous peoples around the world.
Description
Keywords
Indigenous studies , Digital media , Philosophy of space and time , New media , Indigenous , Epistemology
Citation
de la Garza, A. (2016) 'Aboriginal digitalities: indigenous peoples and new media', in Travis, C. and von Lünen, A. (eds.) The Digital Arts and Humanities: Neogeography, Social Media and Big Data Integrations and Applications. London: Springer, pp. 49-62.
Link to publisher’s version
Copyright
© 2016, Springer International Publishing Switzerland. All rights reserved.