Isabel Bramsen
Associate Professor | Director Peace and Conflict Studies
Visual (data) observation in International Relations : Attentiveness, close description, and the politics of seeing differently
Author
Summary, in English
Has Visual International Relations (IR) become too distant from the content of visual artefacts? This is a paradoxical question. Visual IR is a vibrant and pluralist field exploring visuals in innumerable ways. Nonetheless, the field tends to focus on 'deep' readings of the socio-political implications of visual artefacts at the expense of a close and attentive observation and description of the events, situations, or phenomena they may depict. Simply put, visual IR usually analyses visuals-as-visuals rather than seeing them as entry points for studying the social world. But might a video of torture teach us something about the practicality of torture? Might a video of peace negotiations teach us something about their successes or failures? Can we gain a fleeting glimpse of 'reality' within visuals? We address these questions by first situating our focus on close 'visual (data) observation' in conceptual conversation with the literature's existing focus on deep interpretation. Second, we outline three approaches to visual observation as they are deployed outside IR. Third, we unpack how those approaches might be of value for IR, especially vis-à-vis the study of practice, materiality, and discourse. Finally, we conclude by asking if visual data observation can retain critical political potentiality.
Department/s
- Department of Political Science
Publishing year
2023
Language
English
Publication/Series
Review of International Studies
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Topic
- Cultural Studies
Keywords
- critique
- description
- methodology
- micro-sociology
- observation
- Visual International Relations
Status
Inpress
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0260-2105