Centering Indigenous Standpoints through Mediated Communication: Seeding Good Medicine
By (Author) Ben LaPoe
By (author) Victoria L. LaPoe
Contributions by Shondiin Silversmith
Contributions by Taylor Orcutt
Contributions by Sarah M. Liese
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
8th January 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Personal and public health / health education
Indigenous peoples / Indigeneity
Cultural and media studies
Hardback
144
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
This book explores how different forms of Indigenous media, including social media, are significant advocatory and educational methods of resistance against repeated attempts at genocide, erasure, misrepresentation, vilification, forced assimilation, and stereotyping perpetuated by colonial systems.
In this book, Ben R. LaPoe and Victoria L. LaPoe discuss how, unlike mainstream media operating under settler principles, Indigenous media privileges Indigenous life experiences, emphasizes Indigenous contexts, honors Indigenous social mores, amplifies Indigenous voices, and incorporates Indigenous worldviews. The book introduces readers to these intersections of Indigenous knowledge and explores the ways in which narrative advocacy empowers and benefits those who communicate their own voices and experiences.
Through a multi-method approach and analyses of Indigenous social media posts using Indigenous Standpoint Theory as a framework, the authors identify and explain Indigenous advocacy renovation efforts on mainstream social media platforms and demonstrate how different platforms can impact a community and act as a form of source sovereignty. Ultimately, the authors position Indigenous Standpoint Theory as a key approach to supporting the decolonization of knowledge and advocacy in media spaces.
Ben R. LaPoe II is Assistant Professor in the School of Communication Studies at Ohio University, USA.
Victoria LaPoe is Professor in the Scripps College of Communication's E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University, USA.