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Visual anthropology
Visual anthropology is a subfield of cultural anthropology that is concerned, in part, with the study and production of ethnographic photography, film and, since the mid-1990s, new media. While the term is sometimes used interchangeably with ethnographic film, visual anthropology also encompasses the anthropological study of visual representation, including areas such as performance, museums, art, and the production and reception of mass media. Visual representations from all cultures, such as sandpaintings, tattoos, sculptures and reliefs, cave paintings, scrimshaw, jewelry, hieroglyphics, paintings and photographs are included in the focus of visual anthropology. Human vision, its physiology, the properties of various media, the relationship of form to function, the evolution of visual representations within a culture are all within the province of visual anthropology. Since anthropology is a holistic science, the ways in which visual representation are connected to the rest of culture and society are central topics.
History
Even before the emergence of anthropology as an academic discipline in the 1880s, ethnologists were using photography as a tool of research.[1] Anthropologists and non-anthropologists conducted much of this work in the spirit of salvage ethnography or attempts to record for posterity the ways-of-life of societies assumed doomed to extinction (see, for instance, the Native American photography [2] of Edward Curtis)[3] The history of anthropological filmmaking is intertwined with that of non-fiction and documentary filmmaking, although ethnofiction may be considered as a genuine sub-genre of ethnographic film. Some of the first motion pictures of the ethnographic other were made with Lumire equipment (Promenades des lphants Phnom Penh, 1901).[4] Robert Flaherty, probably best known for his films chronicling the lives of Arctic peoples (Nanook of the North, 1922), became a filmmaker in 1913 when his supervisor suggested that he take a camera and equipment with him on an expedition north. Flaherty focused on traditional Inuit ways of life, omitting to that end any signs of modernity among his film subjects (even to the point of refusing to use a rifle to help kill a walrus his informants had harpooned as he filmed them, according to Barnouw; this scene made it into Nanook where it served as evidence of their "pristine" culture). This pattern would persist in many ethnographic films to follow (see as an example Robert Gardner's Dead Birds). By the 1940s, anthropologists such as Hortense Powdermaker,[5] Gregory Bateson, Margaret Mead (Trance and Dance in Bali, 1952) and Asen Balikci (with Netsilik Inuits' movies) were bringing anthropological perspectives to bear on mass media and visual representation. Karl G. Heider notes in his revised edition of Ethnographic Film (2006) that after Bateson and Mead, the history of visual anthropology is defined by "the seminal works of four men who were active for most of the second half of the twentieth century: Jean Rouch, John Marshall, Robert Gardner, and Tim Asch. By focusing on these four, we can see the shape of ethnographic film" (15). In 1966, filmmaker Sol Worth and anthropologist John Adair taught a group of Navajo Indians in Arizona how to capture 16mm film. The hypothesis was that artistic choices made by the Navajo would reflect the perceptual structure of the Navajo world.[6] In the United States, Visual anthropology first found purchase in an academic setting in 1958 with the creation of the Film Study Center at Harvard's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.[7] John Collier, Jr. wrote the first standard textbook in the field in 1967, and many visual anthropologists of the seventies relied on semioticians like Roland Barthes for essential critical perspectives. In 2011, Marcus Banks and Jay Ruby published the first history of the field - Made To Be Seen: Historical Perspectives on Visual Anthropology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. At present, the Society for Visual Anthropology [8] (SVA) represents the subfield in the United States as a section of the American Anthropological Association. In the United States, Ethnographic films are shown each year at the Margaret Mead Film Festival.
Visual anthropology
Visual anthropology pathways: Ethnographic Documentary with Film; and Ethnographic Documentary with Sensory Media. Established in 1987, the Granada Centre's postgraduate programme has produced over 200 documentary films, and its students have made films for BBC, Channel 4 and many other international broadcasters. http://www. socialsciences.manchester.ac.uk/disciplines/socialanthropology/visualanthropology/ University of New South Wales: offers a PhD in Visual Anthropology [33] University of Oxford: The Institute of Social & Cultural Anthropology offers a one-year MSc in Visual Anthropology [34]. University of South Carolina offers a Graduate Certificate in Visual Anthropology [35] for graduate students enrolled in M.A. or Ph.D. programs in Media Arts and Anthropology but which also serves graduate students in such areas as Education, the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, as well as Sociology and Geography. University of Southern California - USC Center for Visual Anthropology: The MAVA (Master of Arts in Visual Anthropology) was a 2-3 year terminal Masters program from 19842001, which produced over sixty ethnographic documentaries. In 2001, it was merged into a Certificate in Visual Anthropology given alongside the Ph.D. in Anthropology. A new digitally based program was created in the Fall of 2009 as a new one year MA program in Visual Anthropology [36]. [37] University of Troms: The University of Troms offers a program in Visual Culture Studies [38]
List of Films
List of visual anthropology films
References
[1] Jay Ruby. " Visual Anthropology (http:/ / astro. temple. edu/ ~ruby/ ruby/ cultanthro. html)." In Encyclopedia of Cultural Anthropology, David Levinson and Melvin Ember, editors. New York: Henry Holt and Company, vol. 4:1345-1351, 1996 . [2] http:/ / memory. loc. gov/ ammem/ award98/ ienhtml/ curthome. html [3] Harald E.L. Prins, "Visual Anthropology." Pp.506-525, In T.Biolsi. ed. A Companion to the Anthropology of American Indians. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing]. [4] Erik Barnouw. Documentary: A history of the Non-Fiction Film. New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993. [5] Hortense Powdermaker. Hollywood, the Dream Factory: An Anthropologist Studies the Movie Makers. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1950. [6] Darnell R. Through Navajo eyes: An exploration in film communication and anthropology. American Anthropologist, Vol 76, pp 890, Oct. 1974 [7] Jay Ruby. " The Professionalization of Visual Anthropology in the United States - The 1960s and 1970s (http:/ / astro. temple. edu/ ~ruby/ ruby/ iwf. html)." 2005 The Last Twenty Years of Visual anthropology A Critical Review. Visual Studies, vol. 20, no. 2, pgs. 159-170. [8] http:/ / www. societyforvisualanthropology. org/ [9] Jim Bailey, Sailing to Paradise [10] http:/ / archanth. anu. edu. au/ visualanthropology/ [11] http:/ / www. csuchico. edu/ anth/ ethnolab. shtml [12] http:/ / www. flacso. org. ec/ html/ especializacion. php?ID=DC_00& ID2=DC_48& id_programa=1000 [13] http:/ / www. master. fu-berlin. de/ visual-anthropology/ [14] http:/ / sel. fas. harvard. edu/ phd. html [15] http:/ / sel. fas. harvard. edu [16] http:/ / www. asia-europe. uni-heidelberg. de/ en/ research/ cluster-professorships/ visual-and-media-anthropology. html [17] http:/ / anthropology. as. nyu. edu/ object/ anthro. grad. program. cultmedia [18] http:/ / www. pucp. edu. pe/ EN/ content/ pagina42. php?pID=4457& pIDSeccionWeb=25& pIDContenedor=4458& pIDIdiomaLocal=1& pIDReferencial= [19] http:/ / bss. sfsu. edu/ anthro/ Visual%20MA. html [20] http:/ / userwww. sfsu. edu/ ~biella/ [21] http:/ / www. temple. edu/ anthro/ undergraduate/ visual/ index. html [22] http:/ / www. temple. edu/ anthro/ visual/ index. html [23] http:/ / uam-antropologia. info/ web/ content/ view/ 273/ 77/ [24] http:/ / www. giga. ub. edu/ acad/ npost/ fitxes/ 3/ 200711115. php
Visual anthropology
[25] [26] [27] [28] [29] [30] [31] [32] [33] [34] [35] [36] [37] [38] http:/ / anthfilm. anth. ubc. ca http:/ / www. ucl. ac. uk/ anthropology/ other-courses/ film_courses http:/ / www. kent. ac. uk/ sac/ studying/ programmes/ pgt/ MA/ ma_visual_anthropology. html http:/ / www. studiegids. leidenuniv. nl/ index. php3?m=143& c=17& t=3& v=& k=22940& oc=87& garb=0. 961122668995146 http:/ / www. studiegids. leidenuniv. nl/ index. php3?m=143& c=17& t=3& v=& k=22945& oc=87& garb=0. 8275481388141609 http:/ / www. studiegids. leidenuniv. nl/ index. php3?m=139& c=700& garb=0. 16968962493335587 http:/ / www. gold. ac. uk/ pg/ ma-visual-anthropology/ http:/ / www. gold. ac. uk/ pg/ mphil-phd-visual-anthropology/ http:/ / www. cofa. unsw. edu. au/ degrees/ postgraduate/ research/ phd-visual-anthropology/ http:/ / www. isca. ox. ac. uk/ prospective-students/ degrees/ visual-anthropology/ http:/ / www. cas. sc. edu/ Anth/ Visualcert. html http:/ / college. usc. edu/ anth/ html/ mav. html http:/ / college. usc. edu/ news/ stories/ 634/ legends-asch-and-myerhoff-inspire-a-new-generation-of-visual-ant/ http:/ / uit. no/ vcs/
Related articles
Visual Anthropology (http://astro.temple.edu/~ruby/ruby/cultanthro.html) - Encyclopedia of Cultural Anthropology, article by Jay Ruby Watching Anthropology Films and Videos (http://www.usd.edu/anth/handbook/watchvid.html), article University of South Dakota Visual anthropology in the digital mirror: Computer-assisted visual anthropology (http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/dz/ layers_nggwun.html), article by Michael D. Fischer and David Zeitlyn, University of Kent at Canterbury Legends Asch and Myerhoff Inspire A New Generation of Visual Anthropologists - article by Susan Andrews (http://college.usc.edu/news/stories/634/legends-asch-and-myerhoff-inspire-a-new-generation-of-visual-ant/ )
Bibliography
Banks, Marcus; Morphy, Howard (Hrsg.): Rethinking Visual Anthropology. New Haven: Yale University Press 1999. ISBN 978-0300078541 Barbash, Ilisa and Lucien Taylor. Cross-cultural Filmmaking: A Handbook for Making Documentary and Ethnographic Films and Videos. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997. Collier, Malcom et al: Visual Anthropology. Photography As a Research Method. University of Mexico 1986. ISBN 978-0826308993 Edwards, Elisabeth (Hrsg.): Anthropology and Photography 1860-1920. New Haven, London 1994, Nachdruck. ISBN 978-0300059441 Engelbrecht, Beate (ed.). Memories of the Origins of Ethnographic Film. Frankfurt am Main et al.: Peter Lang Verlag, 2007. Grimshaw, Anna. The Ethnographer's Eye: Ways of Seeing in Modern Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. Heider, Karl G. Ethnographic Film (Revised Edition). Austin: University of Texas Press, 2006. Ruby, Jay. Picturing Culture: Essays on Film and Anthropology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000, ISBN 978-0-226-73099-8. Mead, Margaret: Anthropology and the camera. In: Morgan, Willard D. (Hg.): Encyclopedia of photography. New York 1963. Pink, Sarah: Doing Visual Ethnography: Images, Media and Representation in Research. London: Sage Publications Ltd. 2006. ISBN 978-1412923484 MacDougall, David. Transcultural Cinema. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1998. Pinney, Christopher: Photography and Anthropology. London: Reaktion Books 2011. ISBN 978-1861898043
Visual anthropology Prins, Harald E.L.. "Visual Anthropology." pp.506525. In A Companion to the Anthropology of American Indians. Ed. T. Biolsi. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2004. Prins, Harald E.L., and Ruby, Jay eds. "The Origins of Visual Anthropology." Visual Anthropology Review. Vol. 17 (2), 2001-2002. Worth, Sol, Adair John. "Through Navajo Eyes". Indiana University Press; 1972.
External links
SVA Society for Visual Anthropology (http://www.societyforvisualanthropology.org/) Visual Anthropology Films & Educational Resource Library (http://www.cultureunplugged.com/ documentaries/watch-online/filmedia/index.php) VisualAnthropology.net (http://www.visualanthropology.net/) Visual & Media Anthropology Archive (http://www.antropologiavisual.net/) (Spanish) OVERLAP: Laboratory of Visual Anthropology (http://www.vimeo.com/groups/overlap) Visual Anthropology Review (http://etext.virginia.edu/VAR/) European Association of Social Anthropologists Visual Anthropology Network (http://www.iwf.de/easa/easa. html) Royal Anthropological Institute, Ethnographic Film (http://www.therai.org.uk/film/film.html) National Anthropological Archives and Human Studies Film Archives (http://www.nmnh.si.edu/naa/) collect and preserve historical and contemporary anthropological materials that document the world's cultures and the history of anthropology. Audio-Visual Resources (http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/anthro/faculty/duranti/audvis/) (from the website of Prof. Alessandro Duranti, anthropology department, UCLA) Films of anthropological and other "ancestors" (http://www.alanmacfarlane.com/ancestors/) A kiosk of films and sounds in Ethnomusicology - Robert Garfias (http://aris.ss.uci.edu/rgarfias/kiosk/) Documentary Educational Resources (http://www.der.org) (Visual Anthropology Films & Filmmakers) Documentary "El mal visto". Interpretation about the evil eye from the visual anthropology. (http://video. google.com/videoplay?docid=-5929726044325008045&hl=es.) Visual anthtropology (http://www.visualanthropology.com.cn) (Chinese) Articles on Fieldwork (http://www.rinasherman.com/Writing/publicationsarticles.html) The Ovahimba Years Collection (http://www.rinasherman.com/indexcine.html) Visual Anthropology of Japan (http://visualanthropologyofjapan.blogspot.com/) Artpologist an Art project using Art and Anthropology (http://artpologist.com/)
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