AltaMira Press
Pages: 500
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7591-2113-3 • Hardback • August 2012 • $205.00 • (£158.00)
978-0-7591-2115-7 • eBook • August 2012 • $194.50 • (£150.00)
E-J Milne is a Research Fellow in Applied Social Sciences at the University of Stirling in Scotland.
Claudia Mitchell is a James McGill Professor in the Faculty of Education, McGill University, Canada.
Naydene de Lange holds the HIV and AIDS Research Chair in the Faculty of Education at the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Port Elizabeth, South Africa.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Locating Participatory Video
Chapter 1. Citizenship and Participatory Video, by Marit Kathryn Corneil
Chapter 2 . Defining Participatory Video from Practice, by Chris High, Namita Singh, Lisa Petheram, and Gusztáv Nemes
Chapter 3. (Re)framing the Scholarship on Participatory Video: From Celebration to Critical Engagement: From Celebration to Critical Engagement, by Bronwen Low, Chloë Brushwood Rose, Paula M. Salvio, and Lena Palacios
Part II. Participatory Video as a Critical Research Methodology
Chapter 4. Fostering Social Change through Participatory Video: A Conceptual Framework, by Tamara Plush
Chapter 5. Participatory Video Drama: A Feminist Way of Seeing?, by Louise Waite and Catherine P. Conn
Chapter 6. Reflexivity, Participation, and Video, by Kyung-Hwa Yang
Chapter 7. Play, Affect, and Participatory Video as a Reflexive Research Strategy, by Geraldine Bloustien
Chapter 8 . Mixed Methods Research in Participatory Video, by Tilla Olivier, Naydene de Lange, John W. Creswell, and Lesley Wood
Part III. Working with Visual Data
Chapter 9. What Can a Visual Researcher Do with a Storyboard?, by Lukas Labacher, Claudia Mitchell,Naydene de Lange, Relebohile Moletsane, and Marti-Mari Geldenhys
Chapter 10. Youth Video-Making: Selves and Identities in Dialogue, by Wendy Luttrell, Victoria Restler, and Claire Fontaine
Chapter 11. Making Sense of Participatory Video: Approaches for Participatory Content Analysis, by Nitin Sawhney
Chapter 12. Visual Post-production in Participatory Video-making Processes, by Monica Mak
Chapter 13. The Art of Participatory Video: Relational Aesthetics in Artistic Collaborations, by Verena Thomas and Kate Britton
Part IV. Power and Ethics in Participatory Video
Chapter 14. Beyond Empowerment Inspiration: Interrogating the Gap between the Ideals and Practice Reality of Participatory Video, by Jacqueline Shaw
Chapter 15.Challenging Knowledge Production with Participatory Video, by Shannon Walsh
Chapter 16. Saying “No” to Participatory Video: Unraveling the Complexities of (Non)participation, by E-J Milne
Chapter 17. Participatory Video and Situated Ethics: Avoiding Disablism, by Andrea Capstick
Chapter 18. Realizing the Benefits of Ownership through Participatory Video in a Multimedia Age, by Michael LaFlamme, Guy Singleton, and Kado Muir
Part V. Dissemination and Reaching New Audiences
Chapter 19. Using Participatory Video in Monitoring and Evaluation, by Isabelle Lemaire and Chris Lunch
Chapter 20. Building Sustainability into Work with Participatory Video, by Naydene de Lange and Claudia Mitchell
Chapter 21. Dissemination and Ownership of Knowledge, by Elizabeth Miller and Michelle Smith
Chapter 22. Troubling the Politics of Reception in Participatory Video Discourse, by Sara Kindon, Geoff Hume-Cook, and Kirsty Woods
Chapter 23. Using Participatory Video to Engage in Policy Processes: Representation, Power, and Knowledge in Public Screenings, by Joanna Wheeler
Part VI. Communities and Technologies
Chapter 24. Learning from Communities: Personal Reflections from Inside, by Joshua Schwab-Cartas
Chapter 25. Collaborative Mobile Phone Film Making, by Max R.C. Schleser
Chapter 26. Re-visioning Participatory Video: Interactions with Forms of Online Research, by Pamela Teitelbaum
Chapter 27.Copyright in the Participatory and Online Video Environment, by Patricia Aufderheide
Chapter 28. New Directions in Participatory Video: Emerging Digital Technologies and Practices, by Audubon Dougherty and Nitin Sawhney
Index
About the Editors and Contributors
Much more than an overview, this Handbook advances the field of participatory video methodology in careful, determined, critical and sophisticated ways. Its interdisciplinarity, global scope, and array of rich examples are impressive and instructive as contributors highlight latent ethical and reflexive dimensions by revealing, identifying, and assessing previously unexamined assumptions to promote a firmer foundation for future work.
— Richard Chalfen, Center on Media and Child Health, Boston Children’s Hospital
The Handbook of Participatory Video provides interdisciplinary insight into using and doing participatory video research, serving up both nuanced and broad-ranging perspectives on the theoretical, ethical, and methodological concerns in working with participatory video, as well as the tremendous opportunities, challenges, and benefits of such research. This work is a welcome overview of participatory video research and represents a major contribution that will be of significant interest and benefit to anyone interested in this type of work.
— Jonathan S. Marion, University of Arkansas
• Offers researchers and practitioners across a variety of disciplines the opportunity to critically examine participatory video as a research method
• Draws on work in sociology, geography, communication studies, education, gender studies, peace studies and international development, social Work and health.