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Sociology and Visual Representation
 
 

Sociology and Visual Representation (Paperback)

by Elizabeth Chaplin (Author) "Chapters 1, 2 and 3 are concerned with the changing relationship between critical analysis and visual representation ..." (more)
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Product Description

Product Description
This book is concerned with still images, diagrams, and the visual presentation of the written text. It provides a historical survey of texts whose authors have helped in the development of the social analysis of visual representation.

Synopsis
Recent technological developments have transformed our culture into a much more visual one. Consequently, visual representation now concerns a wide spectrum of social scientists, and no longer just those interested in visual art. This book is concerned with still images, diagrams, and the visual presentation of the written text. It is particularly aimed at postgraduate students, and provides a selective historical survey of texts whose authors have contributed to the development of the social analysis of visual representation. It focuses, especially, on those recent texts which have changed the relationship of analysis to topic which have changed the relationship of analysis to topic of analysis by incorporating visual representation into the analysis itself. The first section of the book focuses on "critical" accounts. It charts the history of critical theories and critical analyses of visual art from the earliest times to the present day.

The author shows that photography, critical postmodernism and, above all, feminism have each played a part in blurring the distinction between art and non-art visual representations and in questioning the assumption that the verbal does the analyzing while the visual merelyconstitutes the object of analysis. The author argues that critical analyses of society are powerful when both verbal and visual dimensions are consciously activated and co-ordinated. The second section charts the history of empirical social analyses of visual art, scientific andother depictions. Again, it highlights those works that make use of the visual dimension,especially in the field of anthropology; and it includes an acocunt of her own photographic project. The section ends by examining social science accounts which take new literary forms, for these indicate that attention to the visual dimension of textual presentation reaches to the heart of current methodological issues.

Chaplin demonstrates that while depictions can contribute to social science analysis things that words alone cannot, unconventional typography and page layout can also add sociological meaning and contribute to a sound methodological stance. She urges social scientists to make more conscious use of visual representation in their analyses. More importantly, she argues that such a course offers social scientists who are women the opportunity to develop a distinctive women's approach to social analysis. Elizabeth Chaplin is a Tutor/Counsellor for the Open University in London; and a Part-Time lecturer in Sociology, University of York

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Chapters 1, 2 and 3 are concerned with the changing relationship between critical analysis and visual representation. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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