Editorial: Revisiting Latin American communication and culture

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Editorial: RevisitingLatinAmericancommunicationandculture YennuéZárate CommunicationandMediaResearchInstitute UniversityofWestminster,UK LatinAmericaisamulticulturalterritorywithalongstandingmosaicofidentities and hybrid cultures (Garcia Canclini, 2005) in continuous transformation. A melting pot of distinctive heterogeneity and difference, from the indigenous ancestry blended with European, African, and Asian migrations. Hall (1987) wouldcallitthe moveablefeast,transformedprogressivelybyculturalsystems around us, now intensified with globalization. ln recent decades, upheavals in social, economic, and political processes pervaded the region. Military dictatorships, civil wars in Guatemala, Nicaragua, and El Salvador, Argentina s Dirty War, the ongoing armed conflict in Colombia and, more recently, Mexico s violentdrugwar tonameafewexamples haveallhaddevastatingeffects.the region is also fraught with relentlessness problems of poverty, socio economic inequality,andexclusionthroughout.theseareissuesthatneedtobeaddressed inrelationtotheregion sintegrationintotheglobaleconomicandpoliticalorder. In recent transitions to democratic and neoliberal regimes in the region, particularlyduringthelastdecade,theshifttoleft wingprogressivegovernments has been a distinctive feature of South America that have changed the geopolitical, social and economic map. Also, as migration flows have increased across the continent, and European capitals, the boundaries of Latin American cultures have been redrawn (Waisbord, 1998) and the hybridisation process pushedfurther. Alltheseprocesseshavetransformednotonlysocietiesandeconomies,butalso culture. Latin American cultural and media research developed from an WestminsterPapersinCommunicationandCulture 2011(UniversityofWestminster,London), Vol.8(1):1 6.ISSN1744 6708(Print);1744 6716(Online)

Zárate,Editorial epistemological break from the British, European and North American Cultural School paradigms and a decentralised and de westernised analysis of sociocultural and political processes in the region. Given the concern of the unequal communication structures, and cultural imperialism, academics and intellectuals boosted the new world order for information and communication McBride Report (One world, multiple voices, UNESCO) towards national communicationpolicies.fromearlyon,communicationscholarsintheregionhad a strong connection with social change, (Pasquali, 1972; Martin Barbero, 1987; García Canclini, 2005; Beltrán, 2000; Freire, 1970). This tradition recovered the concept popular, as an object of enquiry heretofore disregarded, mestizaje, hybrid cultures, and mediations. Given that Cultural Studies are undergoing diversechangesinalltheregionalscenarios,itremainsahighlycontestedfieldof intellectualdebateandanalysis.thelatinamericanculturalandcommunication academyiscurrentlyatacrossroad;itneedstoarticulatearobustvoice,aswell astocirculateknowledgeandtoengageindialogueswithotherregions. ThisnewissueofWestminsterPapersofCommunicationandCultureisdedicated for the first time to Latin America, and by re visiting the cultural and communicationstandpointsundertakenintheregion,itwillhelptoaddressthe ongoingquestionsonglobalisation,andculturalhybridisationfromthelocaland regionalcultures.thepapersexplorearangeofimportantissuesincludingmedia democracy, hybrid identity, media and migration, structure and agency, social change,technology,andresistance.articlesoriginatefromandrefertodifferent countries:mexico,brazil,argentina,colombia,spain,unitedkingdom,andunited States.Theseconferdiverseapproachesanddifferentperspectivesofthestudyof cultureandareauthoredbydifferentgenerationsofscholars(bothconsolidated and early career researchers), giving a glimpse of the latest research and new directionsoftheresearchagenda.aninterestingcharacteristicisthatmanyofthe authors are an academic diaspora (both Latin Americans working in the West and vice versa). Whilst we faced the challenge of a linguistic and academic discoursedivide(seepérez Llantadaetal,2010)duringthecallforpapersandin collating the collection, such a mix of perspectives should help to highlight and advancelatinamericaculturalresearch. 2

WestminsterPapersinCommunication&Culture8(1) As an introduction to the intellectual development of Latin American cultural studies, Silvio Waisbord, the media and politics scholar, and culturalist Mónica Szurmuk jointly analyse the political frameworks of cultural studies (including theworkofstuarthallandraymondwilliams)inordertoexplainhowthestudy of culture in the region has been, somehow, divorced from the political and economy enquiry. This, the authors argue, is one of the reasons for a current impasse. In order to overcome it, they put forward new research directions regarding how developments in the region help to understand longstanding questionsofpower,globalization,conflict,andcollectiveidentities. The second paper by Jesús Martin Barbero, a key figure in Latin American culturaltradition,analysestherelationshipbetweencultureandtechnology,and the possible ways to overcome technological determinism. Two processes are dramatically shifting the place of culture in Latin America: the revitalization of identity and technological revolution. The latter makes more evident the technologicalandsocialdivides;thisinequalityisalsocultural,yetmobilizesthe social imagination. These new forms of cultural resistance are Barbero s mediations revisited in the Twenty first Century. The author proposes cultural sustainability and cultural convergence in order to include cultural diversity of regional and indigenous minorities in the network society; he drafts a map of strategicactiontoengagewiththedigitalrevolution. Thereisconsolidatedresearchonthephenomenonofmigrationfromdeveloping nationstotheglobalnorth.unsurprisingly,thisisakeymultidisciplinarytopicin LatinAmericanstudies,yetmedia migrationenquiryisstilladevelopingfield.in thisregard,thisissuepresentstwoarticlesanalysingmediaandmigrationfrom differentapproaches.firstly,fromtheperspectiveofdiasporaandpoliticalnews, Gabriel Moreno evaluates the news coverage of Univisión the largest SpanishlanguagebroadcasterinUnitedStates.Hehasconductedacontentanalysisofthe newscastprogrammenoticierounivisión,withreferencetothecontroversialantiillegal immigration law Arizona SB 1070 passed in April 2011 that aims to identify,prosecuteanddeportillegalimmigrants.thisisapointofdepartureto investigate the construction of diasporic public spheres and whether media can make significant contributions to the empowerment of transnational 3

Zárate,Editorial communities. This thought provoking article proposes a new regard of the configurationoftransnationallatinamericanethnicity,andtheir mediascapes, by delivering an original understanding of the largest ethnic minority in the UnitedStates. Jéssica Retis and Francisco Sierra study the production, consumption, and reception patterns of transnational Latin American diaspora in London, Madrid andlosangeles.withglobalization,recentmigratoryflowshaveslightlyshifted from North America to European capitals. The authors undertake a theoretical critiquetoculturalconsumptionanalysiswithregardtomigration,byofferinga structured literature review of the region s media research. Given that a significant proportion of Latin Americans live outside their geopolitical region, the authors acknowledge that the study of diaspora and media in the USA and Europe focused in Latin America is still a pending task, and propose a novel researchagenda. WhenwethinkaboutmodernLatinAmericancapitals,large,dynamic,sprawling urbangrowth,andslightlychaoticcitiescometoourmind(e.g.mexicocity,são Paulo).Whilstmetropolisarenotusuallyassociatedwithculturalenquiry,Puerto Rican scholar Patria Román Velázquez and Alejandra García Vargas, intertwine the urban, cultural and communication research of ordinary cities within the contextofglobalization.thiscomprehendsnewformsofbeingurbaninordinary cities and understanding the political contexts under which urban practices are occurring.thisworkstressestheimportanceofmovingawayfromthenotionof globalcitiesasproduction,informationhubs,andeconomicsflows,totheideaof thecityasasiteofsymbolicexpression.thereon,theresearchproposesdifferent waysofnarrating,imagining,andunderstandingthecapitalandprovincialcities, oftendisregardedfromtheprevailingurban culturalstudies. Citizens media emancipation through community media is an emblematical landmarkintheregionthatgoesbacktofreireandbeltrántowardsdemocratic participation.inthisregard,alejandrobarranqueroembarksinacomprehensive exploration and analysis of communication for social change in the region, by reviewingthestandpointsoflatinamericancommunicationresearch.theseare 4

WestminsterPapersinCommunication&Culture8(1) skilfully interlaced with contemporary theories of participatory and democratic communication. Through examination of the regional grassroots and critical frameworks in the region, the author sheds light on the Western participatory communicationparadigm. ThelastpaperbyCarolinaMatosanalyseshowmediademocratizationcanassist in deepening the political democratization process in Brazil. In a comparative perspective with European countries, her examination of media system development in Latin America shows a history of neglect of public communication. The relationship between public communication and the public interest, in particular, illustrates the historical deficiencies of public communication frameworks and the mishandling of political, private, and social interests. The Brazilian media environment has changed over the decades, with mediaconglomeratesexpanding,thepaperhighlightstheimportanceofamedia committed to its citizenship, wherein public media is a mechanism that can reinforce both national and local identities, and cultures in negotiation with the publicsphere. The issue s first book review by Anastasia Kavada, media and technologies scholar, provides an analysis of Communication Power (2009) by Spanish landmark scholar Manuel Castells. By progressing from the ideas of the Information Age trilogy, in the context of the network society the book investigatesthefunctioningofcommunicationpower,oneofthekeyquestionsin currentacademyenquiry. Andrea Medrado writes the second book review. A specialist on media and Brazilian favelas (shantytowns), she provides a well grounded assessment of JanicePerlman sbookfavela.fourdecadesoflivingontheedgeinriodejaneiro (2010). During the sixties, Perlman, lived and researched a favela. Thirty years later, she returned to re examine it. The findings re evaluation in two different periodsopensupoldmethodologicalquestionsregardingtheappropriatelength offieldworktofullyunderstandaphenomenon. 5

Zárate,Editorial Finally, it is important to note that marginal (i.e. indigenous) cultures are unfortunately not included in this issue. A lack of economic and academic resourceshasaffecteddevelopmentworkinthisarea.thisproblemexemplifies some of the arguments raised in this issue and also the importance of further research to be done. However, this new issue of Westminster Papers of Communication and Culture aims to open up a window of scholar dialogue and exchange.thisisaspecialopportunitytobringtogetherestablishedscholarsand youngresearchersandtoofferanoverviewofresearchintheregion. References Beltrán,L.R.(2000)InvestigaciónsobrecomunicaciónenLatinoamérica: inicio,trascendenciayproyección,lapaz:plural. Freire,P.(1970)PedagogiadelOprimido,Montevideo:TierraNueva.(English trans.,1996,pedagogyoftheoppressed,trans.m.bergmanramos.london: PenguinBooks.) Garcia Canclini, N.(1990) Culturas híbridas: estrategias para entrar y salir de la modernidad, Mexico City: Grijalbo. (English trans., 2005, Hybrid Cultures: strategiesforenteringandleavingmodernity,trans.c.l.chiappari,ands.l. López,Minneapolis:UniversityofMinnesotaPress.) Hall,S.(1987). MinimalSelves inbhaba,h.k.(ed),identity:therealme:post Modernism and the Question of Identity (ICA Documents, No. 6: 44 46). London:InstituteofContemporaryArts. Martin Barbero,J.(1998[1987])Delosmediosalasmediaciones:Comunicación, cultura y hegemonía, Mexico City: Gistavo Gilli, SA. (English trans., 1993, Communication, Culture and Hegemony: From the media to mediations, trans.e.fox,andr.white,london:sage.) Pasquali,A.(1972)Comunicaciónyculturademasas,Caracas:MonteÁvila Perez Llantada,C.,Plo,R.,Fergusson,G.R.,(2010) Theperceptionsandpractices ofseniorspanishacademicsregardingresearchdisseminationinenglish, EnglishforSpecificsPurposesJournal,30(1):18 30. Waisbord,S.(1998) TheTiesthatStillBind:MediaandNationalCulturesinLatin America,CanadianJournalofCommunication23(3):381 401. 6