Publication | Closed Access
Towards a multi-ethnic public sphere? African-Australian media and minority–majority relations
24
Citations
10
References
2015
Year
EthnicityCitizen JournalismEmerging MediaEducationMedia IndustriesMedia ProducersJournalismMedia StudiesInteractive JournalismRaceMedia ActivismAfrican American StudiesCultural DiversityMinority RightJournalism EthicsEthnic StudiesPolitical CommunicationMedia InstitutionsEthnic Minority MediaMulticulturalismGlobal MediaMulti-ethnic PublicCultureMajority Ethnic GroupJournalism HistoryCritical Media StudiesMass CommunicationArtsAudience Reception
The potential connections between minority ethnic media producers and the majority ethnic group in multicultural societies have received little academic attention. As a result, important questions regarding the role of ethnic minority media beyond their specialised audiences have remained largely unanswered. In this article, we draw upon a series of interviews with African-Australian media producers in Melbourne and interrogate the relationship between ethnic minority media and the broader Australian public sphere. Drawing on Husband’s notion of the multi-ethnic public sphere as an ideal-type model, we analyse the explicit and implicit attempts by African-Australian broadcasters and media producers to communicate across communities and to positively impact the practices and understandings of White Australian journalists and audiences.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1