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Capturing Christmas: The Sensory Potential of Data from Participant Produced Video

Author

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  • Stewart Muir
  • Jennifer Mason

Abstract

In this paper, we discuss our use of participant-produced digital footage of family Christmases, collected as part of a larger project exploring family backgrounds and family traditions. The audio-visual recording (and subsequent dissemination) of these otherwise difficult-to-access domestic celebrations provides important insights into the multi-dimensional, multisensory, physical and situational nature of such family traditions. With their blend of genre styles - from narrated documentary to home-movie style wobbly camera work - the ‘Christmas videos’ show both conscious ‘displays’ of family life and practice (performed for the camera, for the participants and for posterity) and largely unscripted, and sometimes noisily chaotic, interactions. Although videos cannot provide unmediated access into what such traditions are ‘really like’, in combination with our other data sources the footage has helped to push our thinking about family traditions as being at once intellectualised productions and a series of bodily engagements with a host of practices, understandings, knowledges, family histories, things and people. This form of ‘backstage’ analytical usage of the video data has been very productive for us. However, we argue that there are ethical issues in publicly presenting such data alongside other forms of data, eg interview data, in a deep sociological analysis of people's personal lives. There is the potential not only for the production of incisive knowledge and insight, but also for a prying and distinctively sociological intrusiveness, and sociologists need to think carefully about how to proceed.

Suggested Citation

  • Stewart Muir & Jennifer Mason, 2012. "Capturing Christmas: The Sensory Potential of Data from Participant Produced Video," Sociological Research Online, , vol. 17(1), pages 47-65, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:socres:v:17:y:2012:i:1:p:47-65
    DOI: 10.5153/sro.2580
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    Cited by:

    1. Sarah Marie Hall, 2014. "Ethics of Ethnography with Families: A Geographical Perspective," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 46(9), pages 2175-2194, September.
    2. Meredith Nash & Robyn Moore, 2018. "Exploring Methodological Challenges of Using Participant-Produced Digital Video Diaries in Antarctica," Sociological Research Online, , vol. 23(3), pages 589-605, September.
    3. Magali Peyrefitte, 2012. "Ways of Seeing, Ways of Being and Ways of Knowing in the Inner-City: Exploring Sense of Place through Visual Tours," Sociological Research Online, , vol. 17(4), pages 125-141, November.

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