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Vår 2026

SVF-3116 Multimodal Anthropology and evocative storytelling - 10 stp


The course is administrated by

Institutt for samfunnsvitenskap

Type of course

The course is compulsory for students admitted to the Master's programme in Visual and Multimodal Anthropology, and open to other Master's level students as an elective course.

It may also be taken as a singular course.


Course contents

This is a course introducing students to Multimodal Anthropology.

It reflects recent changes in the cultural and media landscape that we engage with as anthropologists: 1) The democratisation and integration of new technologies such as the Internet and mobile phones; and 2) The shift toward engagement and collaboration in anthropological research, particularly in Indigenous contexts, and the dynamic roles of anthropologist’s vis-a-vis the public and the communities in which they work.

We emphasise that all anthropological research today has an obligation to maintain a dialogue with its "fields" about the development and dissemination of knowledge. Ethnographic action is a concept we want to discuss, to address our field collaborators’ purposes for contributing and collaborating in research projects.

The course will present and discuss various approaches to multimodal 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. Here students will be introduced to the anthropology of the senses and how non-verbal fields of knowledge can contribute to a broadening of communication between informant, researcher and audience, and accordingly also to an enlargement of the scope of the social sciences. Lectures will include case-studies using museum exhibitions, photographs, ethnographic video games, digital ethnographies, interactive documentaries, soundscapes drawings, and more.

It also invites for reflections on:How artifacts constitute aspects of social systems;How the relationships between visual perception and culturalorganization unfold through time;How cultural representations are embedded in/generate powerrelations; andThe potential new ways of doing so called applied research andresearch dissemination.


Objective of the course

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

Knowledge

Skills

General competence


Language of instruction

English

Teaching methods

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