Difference between revisions of "Ball2005"

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|Author(s)=Mike Ball
 
|Author(s)=Mike Ball
 
|Title=Working with images in daily life and police practice: an assessment of the documentary tradition
 
|Title=Working with images in daily life and police practice: an assessment of the documentary tradition
|Tag(s)=EMCA; documentary; practical reasoning; representation; surveillance; Ethnomethodology;  
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|Tag(s)=EMCA; documentary; practical reasoning; representation; surveillance; Ethnomethodology;
 
|Key=Ball2005
 
|Key=Ball2005
 
|Year=2005
 
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|Volume=5
 
|Volume=5
 
|Number=4
 
|Number=4
|Pages=499-521
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|Pages=499–521
|Abstract=There is a growing body of literature within the
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|URL=http://qrj.sagepub.com/content/5/4/499
humanities and social sciences that is directly critical of the
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|DOI=10.1177/1468794105056925
documentary tradition’s treatment and use of still and moving
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|Abstract=There is a growing body of literature within the humanities and social sciences that is directly critical of the documentary tradition’s treatment and use of still and moving images as realistic data. The documentary tradition claims that it is possible to visually document social scenes with cameras. Postmodernism, poststructuralism, critical theory and related traditions argue that still and moving images amount to representations, their critique of realism. As instruments, cameras are open to a variety of uses ranging from the scientific to the artistic in orientation. Such uses of cameras comprise representational work. Following Garfinkel, this article suggests that the documentary method of sense making is employed in numerous practical situations.
images as realistic data. The documentary tradition claims that it  
+
This article commences with an overview of the documentary tradition and then offers a brief case study of certain of these principles in operation within the practical work of the police and road users on public highways. Public highways and traffic flows along them are visually available social arrangements. Within police work that involves the regulation and management of traffic flows, stored images of vehicles can serve as documentary evidence of traffic violations. In this particular context and more generally on the highways, road users treat objects such as road signs and related items of roadside furniture, including cameras and road markings, as documents of some, for all practical purposes, real states of affairs. Road users make sense of the stream of visual information encountered as an ongoing practical accomplishment.
is possible to visually document social scenes with cameras.
 
Postmodernism, poststructuralism, critical theory and related
 
traditions argue that still and moving images amount to
 
representations, their critique of realism. As instruments, cameras
 
are open to a variety of uses ranging from the scientific to the artistic
 
in orientation. Such uses of cameras comprise representational
 
work. Following Garfinkel, this article suggests that the
 
documentary method of sense making is employed in numerous
 
practical situations.
 
This article commences with an overview of the documentary
 
tradition and then offers a brief case study of certain of these
 
principles in operation within the practical work of the police and
 
road users on public highways. Public highways and traffic flows
 
along them are visually available social arrangements. Within police
 
work that involves the regulation and management of traffic flows,
 
stored images of vehicles can serve as documentary evidence of
 
traffic violations. In this particular context and more generally on
 
the highways, road users treat objects such as road signs and related
 
items of roadside furniture, including cameras and road markings,
 
as documents of some, for all practical purposes, real states of
 
affairs. Road users make sense of the stream of visual information
 
encountered as an ongoing practical accomplishment.  
 
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 11:36, 16 February 2016

Ball2005
BibType ARTICLE
Key Ball2005
Author(s) Mike Ball
Title Working with images in daily life and police practice: an assessment of the documentary tradition
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, documentary, practical reasoning, representation, surveillance, Ethnomethodology
Publisher
Year 2005
Language
City
Month
Journal Qualitative Research
Volume 5
Number 4
Pages 499–521
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/1468794105056925
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

There is a growing body of literature within the humanities and social sciences that is directly critical of the documentary tradition’s treatment and use of still and moving images as realistic data. The documentary tradition claims that it is possible to visually document social scenes with cameras. Postmodernism, poststructuralism, critical theory and related traditions argue that still and moving images amount to representations, their critique of realism. As instruments, cameras are open to a variety of uses ranging from the scientific to the artistic in orientation. Such uses of cameras comprise representational work. Following Garfinkel, this article suggests that the documentary method of sense making is employed in numerous practical situations. This article commences with an overview of the documentary tradition and then offers a brief case study of certain of these principles in operation within the practical work of the police and road users on public highways. Public highways and traffic flows along them are visually available social arrangements. Within police work that involves the regulation and management of traffic flows, stored images of vehicles can serve as documentary evidence of traffic violations. In this particular context and more generally on the highways, road users treat objects such as road signs and related items of roadside furniture, including cameras and road markings, as documents of some, for all practical purposes, real states of affairs. Road users make sense of the stream of visual information encountered as an ongoing practical accomplishment.

Notes