2017
DOI: 10.1111/aman.12963
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Drawing as Radical Multimodality: Salvaging Patrick Geddes's Material Methodology

Abstract: This essay, which is accompanied by a collective online sketchbook on the American Anthropologist website, is about drawing as a research methodology. 1 Drawing, like writing, is a craft that can be learned. It is a radical social research method, recalling the lost, undisciplined roots of research into "folk, work, place" in Britain-roots that this essay explores through the Foundations of British Sociology: The Sociological Review Archive at Keele University (Keele University 2010). Too many scholars now res… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Despite its use by early 20th-century figures such as Patrick Geddes and the burgeoning interest in visual methods more generally, drawing has been a somewhat marginal practice in the methodological repertoire of contemporary sociologists (Hurdley et al, 2017). Its use has been relatively isolated within particular areas of sociological enquiry, such as research with children (Eldén, 2011).…”
Section: Drawing Out Lessons For Carementioning
confidence: 99%
See 4 more Smart Citations
“…Despite its use by early 20th-century figures such as Patrick Geddes and the burgeoning interest in visual methods more generally, drawing has been a somewhat marginal practice in the methodological repertoire of contemporary sociologists (Hurdley et al, 2017). Its use has been relatively isolated within particular areas of sociological enquiry, such as research with children (Eldén, 2011).…”
Section: Drawing Out Lessons For Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This neglect of drawing as a sociological method is widespread among other cognate disciplines with the notable exception of anthropology: in particular, Tim Ingold has argued for a more ‘graphic anthropology’ (2011b: 18), in which drawing is used as a method through which to better understand and engage with the complexities of human experience (2011a). Hurdley and her colleagues argue that drawing, as both research practice and cultural material, disrupts conventional logics and ways of knowing the social: drawing, they argue, is a slow and patient method that can afford ‘a different kind of looking, even a different mode of shaping the world’ (2017: 750). Heath and colleagues similarly argue that drawing leads to a more concentrated practice of seeing than even other visual methods, because of the ‘intense, sustained and embodied engagement between the hand and the eye’ required when sketching in fieldwork settings (2018: 726).…”
Section: Drawing Out Lessons For Carementioning
confidence: 99%
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