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News aesthetics and myth : the making of media illiteracy in India / by Shashidhar Nanjundaiah.

By: Series: Routledge research in cultural and media studiesPublisher: London ; New York : Routledge, 2025Description: xvii, 228P. ill.: 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781032755410
  • 9781032755427
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: News aesthetics and mythDDC classification:
  • 302.23/0954 23/eng/20240315
LOC classification:
  • P 96.M42 .N36 2025
Contents:
1. The discomfort with media literacy -- 2. Trust, promise, and duty -- 3. Post-reflexive modernity -- 4. Continuity in postcolonial narration -- 5. Aesthetics, presentation, absentation -- 6. Case study: The spectacle of India's Potemkin village -- 7. News aesthetics and the narrative structure -- 8. Case study: invisibility in Boolgarhi -- 9. Towards demystification of media illiteracy -- 10. An evaluative framework -- 11. Conclusion: some reflections.
Summary: "This book considers the presence of media illiteracy in a world in which we are supposedly consumed by media, live a media life, in a media ecosystem, surrounded only by mediated communication. Unpacking this paradoxical situation, the author proposes that before venturing into media literacy, we must first understand the workings of how mystification occurs. Departing from the idea that aesthetics work on an agreed set of principles between art and society, the author applies this ideology of aesthetics to news-based narration. Using empirical cases from India, the author proposes demystification as a possible methodology to approach media illiteracy and recommends completely transformed media literacy programs that deliver to communities, drawing from the construct of critical pedagogy. The book offers the possibilities for a collectivistic, non-Western, postcolonialist model of learning by using the very collective and hierarchical identities of societies that must be critiqued. This vital and innovative book will be an important resource for scholars and students in the areas of media literacy and critical media literacy, media education, journalism, mass communication, aesthetics and media technology"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books NILE UNIVERSITY OF NIGERIA - MAIN LIBRARY P 96.M42 .N36 2025 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 0199668
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. The discomfort with media literacy -- 2. Trust, promise, and duty -- 3. Post-reflexive modernity -- 4. Continuity in postcolonial narration -- 5. Aesthetics, presentation, absentation -- 6. Case study: The spectacle of India's Potemkin village -- 7. News aesthetics and the narrative structure -- 8. Case study: invisibility in Boolgarhi -- 9. Towards demystification of media illiteracy -- 10. An evaluative framework -- 11. Conclusion: some reflections.

"This book considers the presence of media illiteracy in a world in which we are supposedly consumed by media, live a media life, in a media ecosystem, surrounded only by mediated communication. Unpacking this paradoxical situation, the author proposes that before venturing into media literacy, we must first understand the workings of how mystification occurs. Departing from the idea that aesthetics work on an agreed set of principles between art and society, the author applies this ideology of aesthetics to news-based narration. Using empirical cases from India, the author proposes demystification as a possible methodology to approach media illiteracy and recommends completely transformed media literacy programs that deliver to communities, drawing from the construct of critical pedagogy. The book offers the possibilities for a collectivistic, non-Western, postcolonialist model of learning by using the very collective and hierarchical identities of societies that must be critiqued. This vital and innovative book will be an important resource for scholars and students in the areas of media literacy and critical media literacy, media education, journalism, mass communication, aesthetics and media technology"-- Provided by publisher.

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