Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/6253
Author(s): Carvalho, Clara
Date: 2011
Title: Audiovisual Instruments in Ethnographic Research
ISBN: 978-2-86978-483-3
Keywords: Audiovisual
Ethnographic Research
Abstract: In 1973, the most renowned researchers in Visual Anthropology met at the ninth International Congress of Anthropology and Sociology to discuss the role of film and photography in ethnographic research and to systematize the almost century-old experiences of bringing together description, ethnography, photography and film. Opening the meeting, Dean Margaret Mead enthusiastically defended the use of audiovisual instruments in research. Considering that Anthropology explicitly or implicitly accepted the responsibility of ‘preserving’ the descriptions of disappearing cultural habits, Mead prescribed the need for an ‘urgent anthropology’ that used photographs and films as supporting research means. She endorsed the view that the camera should be used as a research instrument as well as a means of disseminating a study, conjuring concerns with the film’s stylistic and aesthetic qualities while stressing its documental value. In her own terms, Anthropology should maximize the potentialities of the audiovisual media within its reach instead of being merely a ‘science of words’ (Mead 1995).
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CEI-CLI - Capítulos de livros internacionais

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