Tuesday, 10 December 2013

Project Review


Visual Research Review

I started this project thinking that I would photograph feet in interesting poses, with the added consideration that this would not involve publishing any identifiable features. However, it soon became obvious that catching moving, or even static, feet was a very tricky proposition, and was not going to be a very easy or productive task.  I moved onto looking at the tracks feet make, and in the process, took the photograph which changed the direction of the project. Seeing my husband walk away into the distance on a beach gave me the inspiration that footprints are harbingers of a journey of some kind.  We live in Oban; the coast is a vital part of our lives – and on the coast, journeys are made by boat. There are boats of every kind around, so photographing boats seemed a much more productive idea. Having take a number of photographs of moving, static and moribund vessels, I realised that moving boats carry a much more powerful metaphor – they are on a journey and their passengers are also on their own individual journeys.  Hence the title of my blog ‘Boats as a Metaphor for Journeys’.

I considered using semiotic analysis as the basis for exploring the ideas and messages encapsulated in photographs of moving boats following the schema described by Roland Barthes (1964);  but as I started to attempt to analyse photographs using Barthes’ ideas of studium and punctum;  syntagems and signifiers;  connotations and denotations, I felt very constrained by the formality of the methodology.  I felt that I was playing word games rather than getting to grips with the meaning and ideas behind the images. The philosophy behind Grounded Theory, first propounded by Glaser and Strauss in 1967, looked more promising as a way of really understanding the messages revealed through the images. It is possible that with patience, the semiotic concepts of ‘connotation’ and ‘denotation’ would have lead similar outcomes, but Grounded Theory appeared to offer a more open ‘brainstorming’ method of analysis which looked more engaging in this instance.  Glaser and Strauss (1967: 49) state that “The basic criterion for governing the comparison groups for discovering (Grounded) theory is their ‘theoretical relevance’ for furthering the development of emerging categories.  The researcher chooses any groups that will help generate, to the fullest extent, as many properties of the categories as possible, and that will help relate categories to each other and to their properties”.  In the event, I felt that Grounded Theory was very successful in elucidating ideas and providing a useful analysis of my images of moving boats.

As Prosser points out (1998: 92ff) a major problem with any kind of qualitative photographic analysis is reflexivity – the fact that the presence of the researcher inevitably affects the subject of the research – for example, a child smiling or posing for the camera.  Prosser (1998: 87) further states, “the act of image-making unacceptably alters the object in the frame and therefore objective content and subjective meaning of the image: images are, by their nature, ambiguous, and do not in themselves convey meanings which are supplied serendipitaly by those who perceive them”  In the case of my photographs of moving boats, I could not have any personal effect on any of the people involved in journeying on the boats photographed; I did, however, choose how and when I took the pictures – which could be construed as reflexology. My photographs, particularly the later ones, were carefully chosen to back up my thesis of ‘boats as a metaphor for journeys’, and in this respect they also conform to Banks’ observation that “the very presence of the camera confers importance and significance to the scene it reveals” (Banks 1998:15). Furthermore, Harper (1998:25) points out that despite being “true” in the sense that the camera took a real picture of a real image, yet all images are “socially and technically constructed” and need to be interpreted with this understanding in mind. As an example of this, the two photographs of, and from, the Easdale
Island ferry, were deliberately composed to illustrate a boat journeying between two remote communities separated by the sea. These photographs could very well be interpreted completely differently – as pretty holiday snaps, or ‘Hector, the boatman, returning home’ or ‘white cottages on an island’. However, in the context of this blog, I am inviting the reader to accept my interpretation, at least for the duration of the project.  In Prosser’s words (1998: 102), I have set up this photo-diary, the latter part in
particular, as a set of “visual quotes” to back up my working hypothesis that boats are indeed a ‘metaphor for journeys’. Prosser & Schwartz (1998: 125) reflect on this mode of research process thus: “Analysing photographic data in qualitative research, as with textual data, is a series of inductive and formative acts carried out throughout the research process.  As with other qualitative research strategies, visual researchers begin the task of analysis in the course of field research so that new inferences can be exploited before the fieldwork ends”

In this context, it is interesting, to note in passing, that almost all of the literature on visual sociology refers to anthropological or ethnographic research.  There is relatively very little on quantitative image research applied to inanimate objects, although Prosser and Schwarz do discuss this to some degree in their work on “Sociology and the Research Process” (1998: 101-114). In this respect, boats are particularly interesting as they cross the boundary between ‘animate’ and ‘inanimate’ – being inanimate per se, but always existing within an animate and social context.

The end-point of this project was reached when the Grounded Theory approach had resulted in a cascade of linked ideas contextually associated with the concept of ‘boats as a metaphor for journeys’. This point represented a break in the research process and the culmination of usefulness of the Grounded Theory approach.  Further research could be very productive, but would need to tackled using a different methodology – discourse analysis suggests itself as being a valuable tool here. As Wetherell & Potter (1987: 32, 173) state “The principal tenet of discourse analysis is that function involves the construction of versions, and is demonstrated by language variation.” And “In discourse analysis, the extracts are not characterisations or illustrations of the data, they are examples of the data itself. Or in ethnomethological terms, they are the topic itself, not a resource from which the topic itself is rebuilt.” In this instance, the concept of ‘boats as a metaphor for journeys’ could productively be further explored through various discourses, such as a ‘historic discourse’, an  ‘economic discourse’ or a ‘remoteness discourse’.

In conclusion, a Grounded Theory approach provided a useful vehicle for analysing the visual data in the photographs and was able to reveal significant patterns within the images in the blog, convincingly justifying the hypothesis of ‘boats as a metaphor for journeys’.

Banks, M. (1998) ‘Visual Anthropology: Image, Object and Interpretation’. In  Image-Based Research: A Sourcebook for Qualitative Researchers. ed. by Prosser, J. London: Falmer Press, 6-19
Barthes, R. (1964) Elements of Semiology. New York: Hill and Wang
Glaser, B.G. and  Strauss, A.L. (1967) The Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research. London: Aldline Transaction
Harper, D. (1998) ‘An Argument for Visual Sociology’. In Image-Based Research: A Sourcebook for Qualitative Researchers. ed. by Prosser, J. London: Falmer Press, 20-35
Potter, J. & Wetherell, M. (1987) Discourse and Social Psychology: Beyond Attitudes and Behaviour. London: Paul Chapman Publishing Ltd
Prosser, J.  (1998). ‘The Status of Image-based Research’. In Image-Based Research: A Sourcebook for Qualitative Researchers. London: Falmer Press, 86-99
Prosser, J. & Schwartz, D. (1998) ‘Photographs within the Sociological Research Process’. In Image-Based Research: A Sourcebook for Qualitative Researchers. London: Falmer Press, 115-130