spring 2017
SVF-3107 Visual Ethnography and Ways of Knowing - 10 ECTS

Application deadline

Applicants from Nordic countries: 1 December. Applicants from outside the Nordic countries: 1 October.

Type of course

The course is compulsory for students admitted to the Master's programme in Visual Cultural Studies (VCS). It is open for students from other programmes and may be taken as a single course.

Admission requirements

May be taken as a single course. Application code 9371.

Reccommended previous knowledge:

For students of the Master's Programme in Visual Cultural Studies:

SVF-3101 Approaching social realities: Understanding other people's life-worlds

SVF-3102 Conveying social realities: Exploring audio-visual narrative strategies

 

For other students: A Bachelor's degree in a subject within the Social Sciences or Humanities.


Course content

Visual anthropology concerns both the use of (audio) visual material in research and the study of visual systems. The course will present and discuss various approaches to camera-based research, the use of visual material in processes of elicitation of knowledge and the study of already existing visible culture.  These are approaches which imply both challenges and possibilities for the praxis of ethnographic research and dissemination.

               

A focus on the non verbal fields of knowledge can contribute to a broadening of the field of communication between informant, researcher and audience, and accordingly also to an enlargement of the scope of the social sciences. It also invites for reflections on:

  • How artifacts constitute aspects of social systems;
  • How the relationships between visual perception and cultural organization unfold through time;
  • How cultural representations are embedded in/generate power relations; and
  • The potential new ways of doing so called applied research and research dissemination.


Recommended prerequisites

SVF-3101 Etnographic Film-making 1, SVF-3102 Etnographic Film-making 2

Objectives of the course

Students who successfully complete this course should have achieved the following learning outcomes:

 

Knowledge

  •  have knowledge on how the visual can be studied (semiology)
  • have knowledge on how visual systems can be used in the discovery of social processes.
  • have knowledge of the state of the art within visual ethnography/visual anthropology
  • have solid knowledge of how photographic and filmic representations are used in social scientific traditions

 

Skills

  • be able to identify the culturally specific signs which are expressed in smells, tastes, sounds, objects, gestures.
  • be able to reflect critically on the role of sensorial expressions in cultural and social analysis
  • be conscious of conventions in photo and film
  • be able to reflect critically on the role visual representations play in concrete research projects

 

General competence

  • be able to demonstrate how knowledge of systems of sensorial signs favours successful dialogues in the process of research  and dissemination
  • be able to reflect critically of how visual representations articulate with text in social science representations.


Language of instruction and examination

English

Teaching methods

The course consists of theoretical lectures and visual ethnography seminars in which projects using audio-visual methods are presented and discussed.

Assessment

Course attendance is compulsory, i.e. only valid absences will be approved. A minimum participation of 80 % is required.

 

The home examination is to be based on a given topic. Students have two weeks to complete the examination and submit a paper of ca. 3500 words (10 pages). Marking is made according to a grading scale from A to F, where F is fail. A re-sit exam will be arranged for this course


Recommended reading/syllabus

* Pink, Sarah (2013) Doing Visual Ethnography. London. Sage (1-49, 73-103, 123-161)

@ Calfen, R and Rich, M (2004) Applying Visual Research. Patients teaching Physicians Through Visual Illness Narratives. Visual Anthropology Review. Vol 20, Issue 1 (17-30)

Fuenta, E. and Walsh, M. (2013) Framing Through the Senses: Sight and Sound in the Shaping of Everyday Life. In (eds.) Michelsen, T. Kristensen, A. and Wiegand, F Transvisuality - The Cultural Dimension of Visuality.Vol.1 Boundaries and Creative openings. Liverpool University press, Liverpool. (207-222) ISBN: 9781846318917

Ginsburg, F. (1995) Mediating Culture. Indigenous Media, Ethnographic Film and the Production of Identity. In Devereaux, L. and Hillman, R. (eds.) Fields of Vision. Essays in Film Studies, Visual Anthropology and Photography. University of California Press, Berkeley. (256-291) ISBN-13:978-0-226-03661-8

Grasseni, C. (2007) Good Looking: Learning to be a Cattle Breeder. In Grasseni (ed.) Skilled Visions. Between Apprenticeship and Standards. Berghahn Books, Oxford. (47-66) ISBN-10: 1-84545-210-0

Gullestad, M. (2007) "Propaganda for Christ". In Picturing Pity. Pitfalls and Pleasures in Cross-Cultural Communication. Image and word in North Cameroon Mission. Berghahn Books. (1- 34) ISBN 978-1-84545-343-5

@ Hall, S. (1997) Representation. Cultural Representation and Signifying Practices. SAGE Publications Ltd, London. (15-74) ISBN 0 7619 5431 7

Harper, D. (2012) Visual Ethnography. In Harper, D. Visual Sociology. Routledge, London. (8-18) ISBN 978-0-415-77896-1

@ Holtedahl, L. (2010) "Up as a Rabbit-Down as a Lion." Socio-Economic Determinants of New Idioms of Legitimacy and Power in the Public/Private Space. Visual Case Stories from Urban Adamaoua, Cameroon. In Governing the African Public Sphere. CODESRIA, Dakar. (117-175)

@ Hockings, P (etal) (2014) Where Is the Theory in Visual Anthropology? Visual Anthropology. 27:436-456

MacDougall, D. (2006) Social Aesthetics and the Doon School. In The Corporeal Image. Film, Ethnography, and the Senses. Princeton University Press, Princeton. (94-119) ISBN-13: 978-0-691-12155-0

MacDougall, D (2006) New Principles of Visual Anthropology. In The Corporeal Image. Film, Ethnography and the Senses. Princeton, Princeton University Press. (264-274) ISBN-13: 978-0-691-12155-0

MacDougall, D. (1998) Visual Anthropology and Ways of Knowing. In Transcultural Cinema. Princeton University Press, Princeton. (61-92) ISBN 0-691-01234-2

@ Piault, Marc H (etal) (2015) Where Indeed Is the Theory in Visual Anthropology? Visual Anthropology. 28:170-180.

Postma, M. and Crawford, P. (2006) Introduction. Visual Ethnography and Anthropology. In (eds.) Postma, M. and Crawford, P. (eds.) Reflecting Visual Ethnography - using the camera in anthropological research. Intervention Press. Denmark. (1-5) ISBN 87-89825-14-4

Pink, S. (2011) Digital Visual Anthropology: Potentials and Challenges. In Banks, M. and Ruby, R.(eds.) Made to Be Seen. Perspectives on the History of Visual Anthropology. (209-233) ISBN-13:978-0-226-03661-8

Prins, H. (2002) Visual Media and the Primitivist Perplex. Colonial Fantasies, Indigenous Imagination, and the Advocacy in North America. In Ginsburg,F., Abu-Lughod, L., and Larkin, B. (eds.) Media Worlds. Anthropology on New Terrain. University of California Press, Los Angeles. (58-74) ISBN 0-520-22448-5

@ Ramstad, Joroun Bræck. (2012) Once were Warriors ¿ a Model that Matters and a Mirror of Concerns. In Nordlit. 30

Schirato,T. and Webb, J. (2004) Understanding the Visual. Sage publications, London, (1-33) ISBN 1-4129-0157-X

Taylor, L. (1996) Introduction. In MacDougall, D. Transcultural Cinema. Princeton University Press, Princeton. (3-21) ISBN 0-691-01234-2

 

Waage, T. (2013) Seeing Together. Towards a Shared Anthropology with Visual Tools. In Michelsen, T. Kristensen, A. and Wiegand, F. (eds.) Transvisuality - The Cultural Dimension of Visuality.Vol.1 Boundaries and Creative openings . Liverpool University press, Liverpool. (157-173) ISBN 978-1-84631-891-7

@ Whitehead, H. (2010) The agency of yearning on the Northwest coast of Canada: Franz Boas, George Hunt and the Salvage of Autochthonous Culture. Memory Studies 3(3): 215-223

Willerslev, R. (2007) "To have the world at distance": Reconsidering the Significance of Vision for Social Anthropology. In Grasseni, C. (ed.) Skilled Visions. Between Apprenticeship and Standards. Berghahn Books. Oxford. (23-46) ISBN-10: 1-84545-210-0

 

* book to be bought at Akademisk kvarter

@ to be found on the net, through Oria.no.

The other articles are in the compendium to be bought at Akadmeisk kvarter.

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  • About the course
  • Campus: Tromsø |
  • ECTS: 10
  • Course code: SVF-3107
  • Tidligere år og semester for dette emnet