4.7 Article

YouTube Itak: a description of Ainu-related videos

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1057/s41599-023-02336-z

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This study analyzes Ainu-related videos uploaded on YouTube to explore the communication strategies of the Ainu people in current media. The research reveals the different types of content created and/or endorsed by the Ainu people and their allies, as well as the communication strategies used. The study adopts a combination of quantitative and qualitative analysis methods, based on Indigenous communication approaches.
The Ainu are an Indigenous group currently living primarily in Japan. Following the cultural revitalisation of laws and social movements and the appropriation of new technologies, Ainu communities are increasingly using social media to disseminate their culture. However, research on the Ainu people has rarely discussed their communication strategies in current media. In this study, a total of 428 Ainu-related videos uploaded on YouTube were analysed. Basic information about the videos was obtained through the YouTube application programming interface and additional information was acquired by watching them. The videos were categorised into three groups: those produced only by Ainu people, with Ainu people, or without Ainu collaborators. Statistical and qualitative differences between release and upload dates, keywords, categories, conceptualisers, producers, presenters, YouTube metrics, tags, and video descriptions were used to uncover the different types of content created and/or endorsed by Ainu people and the communication strategies used by them and their allies. The combination of quantitative and qualitative methods based on Indigenous communication approaches adopted in this study proved to be useful in understanding Indigenous media in online contexts.

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