using sensory ethnography to understand visitor experiences
Post on 28-Nov-2014
282 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
Gillian Cope – The University of the West of England
The use of sensory ethnography to gain new understandings of visitor emotional experiences and practices at National Trust sites and their implications for future research & management
Overview• Aims• Sites• Methods• What methods
enabled?• Analysis• Findings
Aims• investigate the meaning places
have for people and how people engage with places
• open up new approaches to examining peoples’ engagement with landscapes and places through sensory ethnography
• communicate the above in a meaningful way that enables the NT to evaluate the possibility of implementing the findings and the methods.
Sites
Hidcote Dyrham Woodchester Lacock
Methods- Audience:
- Visitors, staff and volunteers (34 in depth interviews)
- Methods:- Participant observation, semi-structured interviews (recorded
and transcribed), fieldnotes, photography
- Video used for PO, ‘walking with video’ (Pink, 2007), video diary (Simpson,2010)
- The real world messiness reflects the intersubjective truth (Cook and Crang, 2007)
What did these methods enable me to capture?
a rich, detailed record of encounter capturing nuanced interactions, rather than a remembered experience
Walking with video - enabled a more involved approach to the how place and identities are constituted, enables participants to define and represent their own embodied experiences.
place-making process, after Casey (1996) used by Pink, where your body moves through time and space, encounters things and people and by doing so experiences and senses these things.
Video diary interview - gives the opportunity to allow a participant to express themselves without you, the interviewer, being an influencing force but still enables you to hear and see everything they did.
Video diary
Walking with video
How did I analyse?
Manual review of transcripts, video, photography
Identified themes Mind maps to identify relationships within
themes Further Nvivo analysis
Findings - themes Memory Rhythm Escape Connection and
belonging The senses Physicality of
place/objects Relationships
Advantages this is collaborative and observational - multi
methodological approach. enables the ‘voice’ of the research subjects to be
heard articulates hard to capture affects, beyond the voice not simply mirroring but the means through which it
is constructed, understood and acted out. intimate context in which to produce knowledge recognises ambivalence and inconsistency as real
Caveats
Self reflexivity and interpretation We, as researchers, affect the social
world we study (Hammersley and Atkinson, 1983)
Investigate context Sample size
Thank yougcope@glos.ac.uk
top related