Working Images: Visual Research and Representation in Ethnography

Front Cover
Sarah Pink, László Kürti, Ana Isabel Afonso
Psychology Press, 2004 - Performing Arts - 224 pages
Visual methods such as drawing, painting, video, photography and hypermedia offer increasingly accessible and popular resources for ethnographic research. In Working Images, prominent visual anthropologists and artists explore how old and new visual media can be integrated into contemporary forms of research and representation. Drawing upon projects undertaken both 'at home' in their native countries and abroad in locations such as Ethopia and Venezuela, the book's contributors demonstrate how visual methods are used in the field, and how these methods can produce and communicate knowledge about our own and other cultures. As well as focusing on key issues such as ethics and the relationship between word and image, they emphasize the huge range of visual methods currently opening up new possibilities for field research, from cartoons and graphic art to new media such as digital video and online technologies.
 

Contents

Introduction situating visual research
11
Visual fieldwork methods
13
Video and ethnographic knowledge skilled vision in the practice of breeding
15
Photography in the field word and image in ethnographic research
31
Picture perfect community and commemoration in postcards
45
New graphics for old stories representation of local memories through drawings
70
Imagework in ethnographic research
88
Representing visual knowledge
105
Revealing the hidden making anthropological documentaries
129
Drawing the lines the limitations of intercultural ekphrasis
145
In the Net anthropology and photography
157
Conversing anthropologically hypermedia as anthropological text
166
Working with images images of work using digital interface photography and hypertext in ethnography
185
Working images epilogue
204
Index
219
Copyright

Putting film to work observational cinema as practical ethnography
107

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information