Ocularcentric participation frameworks: Dealing with a blind member's perspective
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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Ocularcentric participation frameworks : Dealing with a blind member's perspective. / Due, Brian L.
Ethnomethodological Conversation Analysis in Motion: Emerging Methods and New Technologies. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2023. p. 63-82.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Ocularcentric participation frameworks
T2 - Dealing with a blind member's perspective
AU - Due, Brian L.
PY - 2023/9/29
Y1 - 2023/9/29
N2 - Ocularcentrism is when vision is privileged over other senses for reasons of practical organisation. Visual practices of seeing, looking, and gazing are important for perception and action-construction but are taken for granted in various ordinary interactional projects. Ocularcentric participation frameworks occur whenever vision becomes a collectively anticipated resource for joint activity. These types of organisations become observable and accountable when visually impaired people are part of the framework. An ocularcentric participation framework is not only an emerging issue for situated members but also a methodological problem that researchers must address in their analyses. The research question is: What methods do sighted members of society apply when trying to achieve intersubjectivity with and adopt a visually impaired member's perspective in situ? This research contributes to EMCA studies of vision, perception, and complex participation frameworks by showing and discussing the limits of vision in interaction and when conducting analyses.
AB - Ocularcentrism is when vision is privileged over other senses for reasons of practical organisation. Visual practices of seeing, looking, and gazing are important for perception and action-construction but are taken for granted in various ordinary interactional projects. Ocularcentric participation frameworks occur whenever vision becomes a collectively anticipated resource for joint activity. These types of organisations become observable and accountable when visually impaired people are part of the framework. An ocularcentric participation framework is not only an emerging issue for situated members but also a methodological problem that researchers must address in their analyses. The research question is: What methods do sighted members of society apply when trying to achieve intersubjectivity with and adopt a visually impaired member's perspective in situ? This research contributes to EMCA studies of vision, perception, and complex participation frameworks by showing and discussing the limits of vision in interaction and when conducting analyses.
U2 - 10.4324/9781003424888-5
DO - 10.4324/9781003424888-5
M3 - Book chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85169762168
SN - 9781032544410
SP - 63
EP - 82
BT - Ethnomethodological Conversation Analysis in Motion
PB - Taylor and Francis/Routledge
ER -
ID: 368795394