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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Naomi SchillerPublisher: Duke University Press Imprint: Duke University Press Weight: 0.567kg ISBN: 9781478001119ISBN 10: 1478001119 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 19 October 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsWhile Schiller considers statecraft and the role of poor people rather than the medium of media per se, I'd encourage anyone thinking about media as a channel for social justice to take up Channeling the State. I further recommend this book to anyone considering the relations between the marginalized and the state and the specifics of Venezuelan politics at a particular moment in time. -- Amanda Daniela Cortez * American Ethnologist * We must read Naomi Schiller's Channeling the State, a compelling study of community media in Venezuela, with a sense of urgency.... The book offers a deep understanding of complex political and social processes occurring within social movements that established alliances with the state. What makes it so unique is the engrossing narrative that, benefiting from ethnographic detail, presents a tangible approach to difficult conceptual debates on state formation, populism, and subalternity. -- Luis Duno-Gottberg * NACLA Report on the Americas * Schiller's book boldly unthinks commonsensical categories in the liberal episteme, namely 'the state' and 'society.' Doing so casts the popular classes not as victims of Western imperialism or of Chavista hegemony, but as activated agents who debated in what kind of state would be made. It is an important entry in the emergent field of Chavismo media studies. -- Noah Zweig * International Journal of Communication * This book joins a significant body of anthropological and theoretical work on the state and society in Venezuela. . . . This book is a highly useful aid to that project. -- Daniel Hellinger * Journal of Anthropological Research * This text is important because it so carefully recorded the explanatory principles of Catia TVe and the impact of media technology in the hands of the community desperate to affect state process and policy. . . . This study is quite timely, considering the events that took place in Venezuela in March 2019. It will help future researchers to see whether the theory of community TV and its ethos had a long-lasting impact on the people those stations were designed to serve. -- Albert Tedesco * Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media * Schiller's book is a thorough description of how class and gender affect active citizenship and how these factors create constant conflict in everyday practices of meaning making. -- Virpi Salojarvi * Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly * In this engaging book . . . Schiller is able to buttress critiques of top-down approaches to state power and state-building, showing readers how most interactions and relationships on the ground cannot be neatly categorized as either from above or from below. -- Anna Fournier * PoLAR * This is a rich, timely and compelling piece of work that contributes significantly to debates about the state, press freedom, community media, class, gender and urban social movements. It will be of great value both to those interested specifically in Venezuela and those concerned with these themes in broader terms. -- Matt Wilde * ERLACS * In this engrossing and lively ethnography, Naomi Schiller takes us deep into the world of community television production in the era of Hugo Chavez. She shows how barrio-based Catia TVe made available new ways for media producers to shape the Bolivarian project in the interests of poor people. Channeling the State is an important contribution to the literature on social change under Chavez and a valuable resource for understanding modes of popular participation. --Sujatha Fernandes, author of Who Can Stop the Drums? Urban Social Movements in Chavez's Venezuela In this era of fake news and cascading global crises, Naomi Schiller's Channeling the State couldn't be more timely. Schiller, based on extensive fieldwork in Caracas barrios during the height of Bolivarianismo's popularity, has written the definitive account of the crucial role community television plays as the besieged Bolivarian state struggles to reclaim its original idealism. Schiller's analysis of everyday forms of 'free speech' is lucid, intelligent, and convincing. Channeling the State is a tour de force that provides a model for how to do holistic political ethnography, one that focuses not on social movements nor state bureaucracies but on the mutually constitutive relationship between the two. --Greg Grandin, author of The Empire of Necessity: Slavery, Freedom, and Deception in the New World Author InformationNaomi Schiller is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Brooklyn College, City University of New York. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |