Media and minority ethnic political identity in Nepal

Date

2017

Authors

Greenland, N.
Wilmore, M.

Editors

Udupa, S.
McDowell, S.D.

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Book chapter

Citation

Source details - Title: Media as politics in South Asia, 2017 / Udupa, S., McDowell, S.D. (ed./s), Ch.4, pp.46-60

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

This chapter examines instances of varying successes and failures of Tamang communicative practices to show how they have utilized media to construct ethnic identity in the contested cultural spaces of contemporary Nepal. It argues that analyses of minority media in South Asia must avoid 'homozenizing and systematizing the experiences of different groups of women in these countries, erases all marginal and resistant modes and experiences'. The chapter uses the example of a Tamang language radio production in Makwanpur district to demonstrate how ethnic exclusion from media occurs in practice. However, the examination of media consumption practices, particularly radio listener groups, indicates that other forces are influencing the formation of identity. First, janajati identities, especially those of janajati youth, are being constructed in the midst of rapid movement towards a market-based, capitalist economy. The construction of janajati identity is, therefore, occurring in the midst of the arrival of new resources for identities based on commodity consumption.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2017 Taylor and Francis

License

Grant ID

Published Version

Call number

Persistent link to this record