Monday, 30 April 2012

Chapter 5. Summarise the key points and focus on the Narrative Content.


Chapter 5. Summarise the key points and focus on the Narrative Content.

‘Psychology and Photographic Theory’, by Órla Cronin (1998: 69-83), provides a critical review of the meanings and psychological significance of family photographs.  There are six assumptions challenged within the chapter, however, this essay will focus on the fifth; the meaning of a photograph arises in a narrative context.  The chapter begins by emphasising the lack of theorizing and research to match the massive increase in ‘lay’ photography.  The lack of any firm definitive theory has resulted in a variety of practices based on the common assumptions examined in this chapter, under the banner of phototherapy.  The assumption that photographs are either informative or provoke an emotional reaction is linked to the work of Barthes.  He suggests that either a photograph contained a ‘studium’ (informational) or it contained a ‘punctum’ (emotional) (1980 cited in Cronin, 1998: 71), but Cronin’s objection to this method is its polarizing of the two elements.  In other words, Cronin objects to Barthes’ ignoring the effect of culture on the individual’s emotional reaction.

Another dichotomy that Cronin examines is the assumption that photography is perceived by the ‘lay person’ as either realist or symbolic.  Her research (1996, cited in Cronin, 1998: 75) demonstrated that individuals drifted between the two perceptions depending on the topic discussed, highlighting the issue as more complex.  Moments of time significant to the family commonly presented require caution in their interpretation for the individual, as the significance may be entirely different and non-representative.  Cronin also advises caution in the section that investigates family dynamics drawn from or projected by the family photograph, as the photo-therapist and the photo-theorist view them respectively and emphasises the contradiction of assumptions acted upon within these related schools.  There is also reference to this contradiction in the section titled ‘The Meaning of Photographs Arises in a Narrative Context’.

This section highlights the importance of narrative context in family photographs.  How this questions their validity as memory aides and springboards for therapeutic discovery leads to investigation of the structuring of these narratives.  Cronin looks to Walker and Kimball Moulton’s research (1989, cited in Cronin 1998:76), which argues that the four important feature of family photography are verbal narrative, the privacy of a family photograph collection, the limited audience of the collection and the assumption of an owner who will manage the collection’s display.  There is a cyclical relationship between these four features, which emphasises Cronin’s belief that family photographs create and maintain meaning.  Walker and Kimball Moulton maintain this idea when they claim that every photograph album has an explicit narrative basis, but they also suggest that the narrator is aware of the imperfect nature of the relationship between a photograph and the truth, as the presence of the camera subverts the reality of the situation by its influence.

Cronin then goes on to look at Edwards and Middleton’s work (1988 cited in Cronin 1998:77) in relation to the social aspects of remembering.  This is in order to demonstrate the bi-directional connection between relationships and remembering.  Relationships provide the stimulus and ‘criterion of significance’ for the memory but relationships, equally defined in these terms by memories, are open to construction and renegotiation.  The family photograph provides a motivation for such actions. Cronin’s conclusion emphasises the importance of the photograph’s contextual use as much as the content.  She advocates a hermeneutic approach to research, concentrating on the meaning ‘woven around a photograph’ rather than simply its manifest content.


References:

Barthes, R. (1980) Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography, Paris: Editions du Seuil. (Translated Howard, R. (1988), London: Jonathan Cape Ltd.) Cited in Cronin, Ó. (1998) ‘Psychology and Photographic Theory’ in Image-based Research: A Sourcebook for Qualitative Researchers ed. by Prosser, J. Abington: RoutledgeFalmer 69-83

Cronin, Ó. (1996) ‘The meaning and psychological significance of family photographic collections’, Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Southampton Cited in Cronin, Ó. (1998) ‘Psychology and Photographic Theory’ in Image-based Research: A Sourcebook for Qualitative Researchers ed. by Prosser, J. Abington: RoutledgeFalmer 69-83

- (1998) ‘Psychology and Photographic Theory’ in Image-based Research: A Sourcebook for Qualitative Researchers ed. by Prosser, J. Abington: RoutledgeFalmer 69-83

Edwards, D. and Middleton, D. (1988) ‘Conversational remembering and family relationships: How children learn to remember’, Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 5: 3-25 Cited in Cronin, Ó. (1998) ‘Psychology and Photographic Theory’ in Image-based Research: A Sourcebook for Qualitative Researchers ed. by Prosser, J. Abington: RoutledgeFalmer 69-83

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