2011
DOI: 10.7202/1003966ar
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Uploading selves: Inuit digital storytelling on YouTube

Abstract: This article explores the contemporary use of open-access video-sharing sites by Inuit youth and young adults. Based on 12 months of cyber-fieldwork and focused specifically on YouTube, it explores how Inuit young people across the Canadian Arctic are using online spaces to post short excerpts from their lives and connect with others. The paper situates these digital autobiographies in the recent trajectory of Inuit storytelling, showing that Internet technology allows individual narrators the freedom … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
17
0

Year Published

2018
2018
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
8
2

Relationship

1
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 23 publications
(17 citation statements)
references
References 26 publications
0
17
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Communities are much more often connected to pre-existing digital services on the World Wide Web. In the Arctic the most popular use of Internet connectivity is posting and browsing updates on Facebook and other social media sites, in order to interact with family and friends and to connect to the broader world (Castleton, 2014; Wachowich and Scobie, 2010). Unfortunately, relatively little research has yet explored how the epistemic biases of these common digital platforms impact Indigenous knowledge (Young, 2016).…”
Section: Digital Technologies Knowledge Politics and Indigeneitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Communities are much more often connected to pre-existing digital services on the World Wide Web. In the Arctic the most popular use of Internet connectivity is posting and browsing updates on Facebook and other social media sites, in order to interact with family and friends and to connect to the broader world (Castleton, 2014; Wachowich and Scobie, 2010). Unfortunately, relatively little research has yet explored how the epistemic biases of these common digital platforms impact Indigenous knowledge (Young, 2016).…”
Section: Digital Technologies Knowledge Politics and Indigeneitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the case of these Facebook groups, the aim is to share their experiences, maintain and support their culture and to, as seen in their descriptions, transmit these things to the younger generations. This relates to the observation of other researchers, for example, Wachowich and Scobie (2010), who studied YouTube defining it as a social network that can be used for storytelling through which young Inuit can "bypass the more dominant Western historical consciousness and epistemologies that have traditionally governed media representations of Inuit social life" and "claim their own narrative terrains in cyberspace and beyond" (p. 85). The point here is that social networks seem to be a collection of the meaning of being Inuit, and where photos are exchanged and conversations are carried.…”
Section: The Use Of Facebook Groupsmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Comparative case studies of media initiatives like ours draw attention to the broader sets of social relations from which they are generated, the "embedded aesthetics" (Ginsburg 1994; see also Geismar 2013) of the setting within which they operate, as well as the relationships or "media worlds" that they inspire (Ginsburg, Abu-Lughod, and Larkin 2002). In the Arctic, media savviness now exists side by side with an understanding of hunting equipment, hunting territories, weather conditions, and skin garment processing and making (Wachowich 2010, Wachowich andScobie 2010). And, as this article sets out to prove, they have, in some ways, become mutually constitutive.…”
Section: Conclusion: Building a Digital Archive-cameras Rifles Needmentioning
confidence: 89%