ABSTRACT

This book questions the predominance of “media abundance” as a guiding concept for contemporary mediated politics. The authors argue that media abundance is not a universal condition, and that certain individuals, communities, and even nations can more accurately be referred to as media scarce – where access to media technologies and content is limited, highly controlled, or surveilled.

Through case studies that focus on guerilla militants, incarcerated Indigenous people, and cold war‑era infrastructure, including Soviet “closed” or “secret” cities and Canadian nuclear bunkers, the book’s chapters interrogate how the once media scarce later “speak” to – and can be heard by – the predominant, abundant media culture. Drawing from several art projects and diverse cultural sites, the book highlights how media scarce communities negotiate and otherwise narrate their place in the world, their past experiences and lives, and escape from subjugation. To better understand media scarce politics, the book asks how and when communities become – by accident or force, by choice or necessity – media scarce.

This innovative and insightful text will appeal to students and scholars around the world working in the areas of media and politics, art and politics, visual studies, surveillance studies, and communication studies.

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

The limits of abundant media

chapter 2|15 pages

Media scarcity in apartheid South Africa

chapter 3|15 pages

Retracking incarceration

Cheryl L'Hirondelle's ceremonial infrastructure

chapter 4|16 pages

Re-staging the Soviet secret city

The good life, the toxic life

chapter 5|21 pages

Bunker media

Messages from the abundant and redundant underground

chapter 6|10 pages

Conclusion

Future politics of media scarcity