This ethnographic study explores how four alternative media projects in
El Salvador integrated digital technologies--particularly social
media--into their practices, and whether incorporating these
technologies affected citizen participation not only in the media
production process, but in a broader discursive sphere of civic and
political life as well. Summer Harlow investigates the factors that
influence the extent to which alternative media producers are able to
use digital tools in liberating ways for social change by opening a
space for participation in technology (as content producers) and
through technology (as engaged citizens). The book advances existing
literature with two main contributions: extending our understanding of
the digital divide to include inequalities of social media use, and
including technology use--whether liberating or not--as a fundamental
component of a mestizaje approach to the study of alternative media.