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  • On not talking to strangers: Researching the micro worlds of girls through visual auto-ethnographic practices

    Author(s)
    Bloustien, G
    Baker, S
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Baker, Sarah L.
    Year published
    2003
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    How can visual ethnography help us to understand the nature and the complexity of the (ethnic/gendered/classed) experience of growing up? Drawing on two ethnographic projects, we discuss the purposes and the difficulties of the particular methodology of auto-visual ethnography which we deployed. Our specific focus was the relationship and the tension between the representation and the individual everyday experiences. Through focusing upon the micro worlds of the young people themselves within their wider 'parent' cultures, their engagement with home, school, and outside leisure activities, were revealed to be strategically ...
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    How can visual ethnography help us to understand the nature and the complexity of the (ethnic/gendered/classed) experience of growing up? Drawing on two ethnographic projects, we discuss the purposes and the difficulties of the particular methodology of auto-visual ethnography which we deployed. Our specific focus was the relationship and the tension between the representation and the individual everyday experiences. Through focusing upon the micro worlds of the young people themselves within their wider 'parent' cultures, their engagement with home, school, and outside leisure activities, were revealed to be strategically (if sometimes unconsciously) part of much larger overlapping social spheres and powerful cultural influences. The pre-teenage and teenage female participants were invited to document any aspects of their worlds on cameras and video.
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    Journal Title
    Social Analysis
    Volume
    47
    Issue
    3
    Publisher URI
    https://www.berghahnjournals.com/view/journals/social-analysis/47/3/sa470305.xml
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.3167/015597703782352844
    Subject
    Anthropology
    Sociology
    Cultural studies
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/24837
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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