"Through the efforts of increasingly media-aware NGOs, people in the west are bombarded with images of poverty and inequality in the developing world. Representations of Poverty is the first comprehensive study of the communications and imagery used by international NGOs to represent the developing world. In this meticulously researched and original book, Nandita Dogra examines the full cycle of representation - integrating analyses of the public messages of international development NGOs in the UK with the views of their staff and audiences. Exploring the Europeanised discourses inherent in appeals to this notion of a 'common humanity', she argues for a greater acknowledgment of NGOs as significant mediating institutions which can expand understandings of global inequalities and their historical causation." (Publisher)
Contents
1 Introduction, 1
PART I: DIFFERENCE AND DISTANCE, 25
2 Cast of Characters, 31
3 Distant Spaces 64
4 Global Poverty - Causes and Solutions 74
PART II: ONENESS, 93
5 One Humanity, 95
6 Uniform First World — NGO Perspectives, 125
PART III: REFLEXIVITY, 155
7 Lives of Others — Audience Responses, 157
8 Towards Reflexive Understandings, 186