Seeing as an Act of Hearing: Making Visible Children’s Experiences of the COVID-19 Pandemic Through Participatory Animation

IF 1.2 3区 社会学 Q3 SOCIOLOGY Sociological Research Online Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1177/13607804221087276
Helen Lomax, Kate Smith
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

‘Our Voices’ is an animation co-created with children aged 9–11 during the 2020–2021 global pandemic. A short, stop-start animation of children’s visual, audio and textual representations of their experiences offers a visceral account of the pandemic in England from their perspectives. In making available the animation in this inaugural issue of ‘Beyond the Text’, we have two key aims. The first is to enable children, who have been barely seen and little heard during the pandemic, to voice their experiences in accordance with their aspirations. The second is to reflect upon the process of transforming creative data made by and with children into an animation that is representative of children’s diverse experiences and acknowledges their contributions in ways which enable audiences to engage through ‘seeing’. Accordingly, our accompanying text explores how, through a feminist ethics of care, we sought to co-produce an animation with children which delivers key messages from them and acknowledges their role as co-researchers while maintaining their anonymity. In describing our methodological and ethical practices, we aspire to make visible the relational, dialogic processes inherent in co-production, offering viewers a way of seeing the complexity of children’s experiences through the multi-layered affordances of participatory animation.
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视之为听的行为:通过参与式动画展示儿童对COVID-19大流行的经历
《我们的声音》是一部在2020-2021年全球疫情期间与9-11岁儿童共同创作的动画。一个简短的、走走停停的动画,展示了孩子们对自己经历的视觉、音频和文本表达,从他们的角度对英国的疫情进行了发自内心的描述。在《超越文本》创刊号上推出动画,我们有两个关键目标。首先是让在疫情期间几乎看不到、听不到的儿童能够根据自己的愿望说出自己的经历。第二是反思将儿童制作的创意数据转化为动画的过程,该动画代表了儿童的不同经历,并以使观众能够通过“观看”参与的方式认可他们的贡献。因此,我们的随附文本探讨了我们如何通过女权主义关怀伦理,寻求与儿童共同制作一部动画,传达他们的关键信息,并承认他们作为共同研究者的角色,同时保持他们的匿名性。在描述我们的方法论和伦理实践时,我们渴望让人们看到联合制作中固有的关系、对话过程,通过参与式动画的多层次可供性,为观众提供一种看到儿童经历复杂性的方式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
67
期刊介绍: Sociological Research Online has been published quarterly online since March 1996. Articles published in the journal are peer-reviewed by a distinguished Editorial Board and qualify for inclusion in the UK Research Assessment Exercise. Sociological Research Online was established under the Electronic Libraries Programme (eLib). When funding ceased in September 1998, Sociological Research Online introduced institutional subscriptions in order to be able to continue publishing high quality sociology. The journal is still available without charge to individuals accessing it from non-institutional networks.
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