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Brian Larkin

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  28
Citations -  3640

Brian Larkin is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Engineering & Volume (thermodynamics). The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 21 publications receiving 3072 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Politics and Poetics of Infrastructure

TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace the range of anthropological literature that seeks to theorize infrastructure by drawing on biopolitics, science and technology studies, and theories of technopolitics.
Book

Signal and Noise: Media, Infrastructure, and Urban Culture in Nigeria

Brian Larkin
TL;DR: The making of radio in Nigeria was studied in this article, where Majigi et al. discussed the infrastructure, the Colonial Sublime, and indirect rule of radio broadcasting in Nigeria.
Book

Media Worlds: Anthropology on New Terrain

Abstract: List of Illustrations Preface Introduction I. Cultural Activism and Minority Claims 1. Screen Memories: Resignifying the Traditional in Indigenous Media Faye Ginsburg 2. Visual Media and the Primitivist Perplex: Colonial Fantasies, Indigenous Imagination, and Advocacy in North America Harald E.L. Prins 3. Representation, Politics, and Cultural Imagination in Indigenous Video: General Points and Kayapo Examples Terence Turner 4. Spectacles of Difference: Cultural Activism and the Mass Mediation of Tibet Meg McLagan II. The Cultural Politics of Nation-States 5. Egyptian Melodrama--Technology of the Modern Subject? Lila Abu-Lughod 6. Epic Contests: Television and Religious Identity in India Purnima Mankekar 7. The National Picture: Thai Media and Cultural Identity Annette Hamilton 8. Television, Time, and the National Imaginary in Belize Richard R. Wilk III. Transnational Circuits 9. Mass Media and Transnational Subjectivity in Shanghai: Notes on (Re)Cosmopolitanism in a Chinese Metropolis Mayfair Mei-hui Yang 10. A Marshall Plan of the Mind: The Political Economy of a Kazakh Soap Opera Ruth Mandel 11. Mapping Hmong Media in Diasporic Space Louisa Schein IV. The Social Sites of Production 12. Putting American Public Television Documentary in Its Places Barry Dornfeld 13. Culture in the Ad World: Producing the Latin Look Arlene Davila 14. "And Yet My Heart Is Still Indian": The Bombay Film Industry and the (H)Indianization of Hollywood Tejaswini Ganti 15. Arrival Scenes: Complicity and Media Ethnography in the Bolivian Public Sphere Jeff D. Himpele V. The Social Life of Technology 16. The Materiality of Cinema Theaters in Northern Nigeria Brian Larkin 17. Mobile Machines and Fluid Audiences: Rethinking Reception through Zambian Radio Culture Debra Spitulnik 18. The Indian Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Or, What Happens When Peasants "Get Hold" of Images Christopher Pinney 19. Live or Dead? Televising Theater in Bali Mark Hobart 20. A Room with a Voice: Mediation and Mediumship in Thailand's Information Age Rosalind C. Morris Contributors Index
Journal ArticleDOI

Indian Films and Nigerian Lovers: Media and the Creation of Parallel Modernities

Brian Larkin
- 01 Jul 1997 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the influence of Indian movies on Hausa social life through the medium of Littata-fan soyayya (love stories), which created a popular reading public for wilful, passionate heroes and heroines who mimic a style of love and sexual interaction found in Indian films.

"Indian Films and Nigerian Lovers: Media and the Creation of Parallel Modernities."

Brian Larkin
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the influence of Indian movies on Hausa social life through the medium of Littata-fan soyayya (love stories), which created a popular reading public for wilful, passionate heroes and heroines who mimic a style of love and sexual interaction found in Indian films.