@article{Amundaray_2017, title={A Venezuelan Position on the Bolivarian Revolution}, volume={9}, url={https://journals.sfu.ca/stream/index.php/stream/article/view/244}, DOI={10.21810/strm.v9i1.244}, abstractNote={<p>My interest in politics started during my high school years. At 13 I got hooked on the Venezuelan political scenario with the same intensity as most adults. It is not usual for a teenager to be interested in politics, but the impact of the 1998 Venezuelan presidential election was so significant, the coverage by media so widespread, that it was practically inevitable that I would become enthralled in the outcome. “How does who you are and where you stand in relation to others shape what you know about the world?” By raising this question, David Takacs (2002) introduces the importance of positionality to knowledge production. Positionality provides a way to understand how objective or subjective researchers are during knowledge production (Lave & Wenger, 1991). I can firmly say that the representations portrayed in Venezuela’s mainstream media built up my character, and shaped the analytical approach that I follow today as a scholar.</p>}, number={1}, journal={Stream: Interdisciplinary Journal of Communication}, author={Amundaray, Douglas}, year={2017}, month={Aug.}, pages={6–13} }