Visual sociology

Visual sociology

Visual sociology is an area of sociology concerned with the visual dimensions of social life. This subdiscipline is nurtured by the [http://www.visualsociology.org International Visual Sociology Association] (IVSA), which holds annual conferences and publishes the journal, [http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/1472586X.asp Visual Studies] .

Because of the interests of its founders, the IVSA tends to be concerned with photography and documentary filmmaking within a sociological context. However, visual sociology - theoretically at least - includes the study of all kinds of visual material and the visual social world, and uses all kinds of visual material in its methodologies.

Similarly, the newly formed British Sociological Association [http://www.visualsociology.org.uk Visual Sociology Study Group] offers UK-based researchers and academics working in a broad range of sub-disciplines within sociological fields a network in which to explore existing and emerging visual research methods and methodologies.

Theory and method

There are at least three approaches to doing visual sociology:

Data collection using cameras and other recording technology

In this context, the camera is analogous to a tape recorder. Film and video cameras are particularly well suited as data gathering technologies for experiments and small group interactions, classroom studies, ethnography, participant observation, oral history, the use of urban space, etc. The tape recorder captures things that are not preserved in even the best researchers' field notes. Similarly, tape recordings preserve audible data not available in even the most carefully annotated transcripts: timbre, the music of a voice, inflection, intonation, grunts and groans, pace, and space convey meanings easily (mis)understood but not easily gleaned from written words alone. By opening another channel of information, visual recordings preserve still more information. For instance, the raised eyebrow, the wave of a hand, the blink of an eye might convert the apparent meaning of words into their opposite, convey irony, sarcasm, or contradiction. So, regardless of how one analyzes the data or what is done with the visual record, sociologists can use cameras to record and preserve data of interest so it can be studied in detail.

Visual recording technology also allows us to manipulate the data. Visual recordings have long been employed by natural scientists because they make it possible to speed up, slow down, repeat, stop, and zoom in on things of interest. It is the same in the social sciences, recordings facilitate the study of phenomena that are too fast, or too slow, or too infrequent or too big or too small to study directly "in the life." Most importantly, through editing visual sociologists can juxtapose events to produce meanings. Sociologists may also be able to put cameras in places where one would not put a researcher: where it is dangerous, or where a person would be unwelcome, or simply to remove the observer effect from particular situations, e.g., studying social behavior among school children on a playground.

Photo elicitation is another technique of data gathering. This methodological tool is a combination of photography as the visual equivalent of a tape recorder, and ethnography or other qualitative methods. Photo elicitation techniques involve using photographs or film as part of the interview -- in essence asking research subjects to discuss the meaning of photographs, films or videos. In this case the images can be taken specially by the researcher with the idea of using them to elicit information, they can belong to the subject, for example family photographs or movies, or they can be gathered from other sources including archives, newspaper and television morgues, or corporate collections. Typically the interviewee's comments or analysis of the visual material is itself recorded, either on audio tape or video, etc.

In any case, in this first sense visual sociology means including and incorporating visual methods of data gathering and analysis in the work of sociology.

tudying visual data produced by cultures

Visual sociology attempts to study visual images produced as part of culture. Art, photographs, film, video, fonts, advertisements, computer icons, landscape, architecture, machines, fashion, makeup, hair style, facial expressions, tattoos, and so on are parts of the complex visual communication system produced by members of societies. The use and understanding of visual images is governed by socially established symbolic codes. Visual images are constructed and may be deconstructed. They may be read as texts in a variety of ways. They can be analyzed with techniques developed in diverse fields of literary criticism, art theory and criticism, content analysis, semiotics, deconstructionism, or the more mundane tools of ethnography. Visual sociologists can categorize and count them; ask people about them; or study their use and the social settings in which they are produced and consumed. So the second meaning of visual sociology is a discipline to study the visual products of society -- their production, consumption and meaning.

Communication with images and media other than words

A third dimension of visual sociology is both the use of visual media to communicate sociological understandings to professional and public audiences, and also the use of visual media within sociological research itself.

In this context, visual sociology draws on the work of Edward Tufte, whose books "Envisioning Information" and "The Visual Display of Quantitative Information" address the communication of quantitative information. Visual sociology considers the logics of presentation of sociological and anthropological documentarians and ethnographers like Robert Flaherty, Konrad Lorenz, Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson, and Frederick Wiseman. Visual sociology also requires the development of new forms -- for example, data driven computer graphics to represent complex relationships e.g., changing social networks over time, the primitive accumulation of capital, the flow of labor, relations between theory and practice.

ee also

*Visual anthropology
*Visual culture

External links

* [http://www.visualsociology.org IVSA website]
* [http://www.visualsociology.org.uk BSA Visual Sociology Group (UK)]
* [http://www.artlab.org.uk ArtLab website]
* [http://www.visualresearch.ru Visual Sociology in Russia]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • visual sociology — Although modern sociology and photography appeared almost simultaneously at the start of the nineteenth century, their lives have for the most part been quite separate. A few early texts such as Frederic Thrasher s The Gang (1927) used… …   Dictionary of sociology

  • Visual culture — is a field of study that generally includes some combination of cultural studies, art history, critical theory, philosophy, and anthropology, by focusing on aspects of culture that rely on visual images. Among theorists working within… …   Wikipedia

  • Visual anthropology — is a subfield of cultural anthropology that developed out of the study and production of ethnographic photography, film and since the mid 1990s, new media. While the term is sometimes used interchangeably with ethnographic film , visual… …   Wikipedia

  • Visual literacy — (or, as it is colloquially known, visuacy [Christopher Allen, in The Australian on 16 August, described this word as a horrible neologism .] ) is the ability to interpret, negotiate, and make meaning from information presented in the form of an… …   Wikipedia

  • Sociology in medieval Islam — Medieval Islamic sociology refers to the study of sociology and the social sciences in the medieval Islamic world. Early Islamic sociology responded to the challenges of social organization of diverse peoples all under common religious… …   Wikipedia

  • Sociología visual — La sociología visual es un área de la sociología referida a las dimensiones visuales de la vida social. Esta subdisciplina está consolidada por la Asociación Visual Internacional de la Sociología (IVSA), que lleva a cabo conferencias anuales y… …   Wikipedia Español

  • List of sociology topics — This is a list of topics covered in sociology. This is a shorter list: List of basic sociology topics. NOTOC A absolute poverty achieved status acid rain acute disease adaptation Adultism affect control theory affirmative action affluent… …   Wikipedia

  • Subfields of sociology — This is a list of sociology subfields. Subfields *Applied sociology/clinical sociology (also see sociological practice) *Architecture, Sociology of *Art, Sociology of *Body, Sociology of *Business, Sociology of *Childhood, Sociology of… …   Wikipedia

  • Chicago school (sociology) — Sociology …   Wikipedia

  • Gyn Talk (Visual Fiction) — AfDM|page=Gyn Talk (Visual Fiction)|date=2008 October 9|substed=yes Gyn Talk (Visual Fiction) is a collaborative series of twenty acrylic paintings that focuses on electronic communications made between two fictional female characters on the… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”