Title: Department of MultiCultural Societies
1???????????(Department of Multi-Cultural
Societies)
- ?? (Special Lectures)
- ????? IV(Theory and Methods,
- Part IV )
2Todays Assignment
- Look at the following web page
- Compare these 2 lists (Qualitative and
Quantitative) and relate them to your Masters
Research. - Then Answer
- Which one is your study (and why) list a few
reasons based on this list - Explain about 2 or 3 ADVANTAGES (i.e. merits) you
see doing your study this way - Also explain 2 or 3 DISADVANTAGES (i.e. demerits)
you see doing your study this way - Importantly, are there any solutions to these
problems (in particular) that you can think of?
Explain - Please write these up simply and submit them to
Professor Holden via mail
3Qualitative Versus Quantitative
- Access this page to see an important list of
terms - http//www.intcul.tohoku.ac.jp/holden/University_
Courses/Tokuron20Lectures-02/Qual-Quant.html
4Two Options
- Systematically work through these differences (on
the chart) - Look at how they are treated in other work
5Looking at Representative Work
- Time Out what does representative mean?
- Related to the Question about Truth
- What is the relationship between Truth and
Representation? - Can one have representation if one doesnt
believe in truth? - Sato-san and Muto-san both say that ultimate
truth does not exist. - Muto-sans position is what we call a
relativist position.
6In Short
- Representation argues that from a pool of thngs,
one or more of them can be pulled out to show the
truth, the continuities, the logic, the reality
of that thing. - Representation can not exist unless we have a way
of judging truth - Representation can not exist unless there is such
a thing as truth
7Famous Story What is an Elephant?
- Once there was a poor Persian village where all
were blind. One day a strange new creature called
an elephant appeared at the village wall. Since
no one in the village had ever heard of an
elephant, the three wisest of the blind villagers
went out to discover what the new creature was
like. They all felt the creature. The first blind
sage felt the tail and said, "This creature
cannot be an elephant, this is a rope!" The
second blind sage felt the leg and said, "No,
this is a tree!" The third blind sage felt the
side and said, "No, you fools, this is a wall!" - As the three sages argued amongst themselves, a
lesser blind man, not knowing any better, mounted
the elephant and rode away. - Adapted from a Famous Sufi Story
8A Different Version
- One blind man felt the broad side and said the
elephant is like a wall - A second, felt the tusk and said it felt like a
spear - The third felt the trunk and thought it was a
snake - The fourth felt the leg and decided it was a
tree - The fifth touched the ear and thought it was a
fan - The sixth felt the tail and thought it was a rope.
9Moral
- All the evaluators were only looking at parts and
could not see the entirety. They were creating
general statements from parts. - Question can we ever make general statements? Is
it a matter of level of being too close to the
micro, not far enough toward the macro?
10Applied to this Class
- In trying to make general statements, we must
also be sensitive to being too embedded in the
local too micro. - On the other hand, one cannot compare (to make a
persuasive argument) without comparing things
that are similar. - Thus, in finding examples, I have to pick from a
pool of similar literature. - Otherwise, we might think Oh these things are
different because they come from different
specialty areas - To avoid this claim, I pick examples (today) from
media studies - Whether this is applicable to your areas of study
is something you must think about.
11Lets Return to earlier discussion
- 2 Books
- Patterson The Mass Media Election
- A study of media and audience in Americas 1976
presidential election. - OBarr Culture and the Ad
- A study of how advertising represents otherness
12Reading Patterson
- First sentence(s)
- Todays presidential campaign is essentially a
mass media campaign. It is not that the mass
media entirely determine what happens in the
campaign, for that is far from true. But it is no
exaggeration to say that, for the large majority
of voters, the campaign has little reality apart
from the media version.
13From this premise, the entire analysis begins
- Look at how Americans view the election
- Look at how they use the media (in relation to
political information) - Look at how the media looks at the election
- See if there is some correspondence
14A Panel Design
- Look at how Americans view the election
- Look at how they use the media (in relation to
political information) - Look at how the media looks at the election
- See if there is some correspondence
15Research Design
- A Panel Design
- Looking at the same set of respondents more than
once. - Question Why?
- What do you Gain with a panel design?
- What do you Lose with a panel design?
- 2 Locations
- Erie, Pennsylvania (medium sized, Eastern town)
- Los Angeles, California (large, Western city)
- Question Why?
- Various Media
- National TV News, 1 National News Magazine, 1
Erie Newspaper, 2 Los Angeles newspapers - Question Why?
16If You Were the Researcher
- What would you want to know?
- Pattersons perspective/orientation was
Positivistic. His data was numerical, based on - Content analysis of news reports
- Standardized questionnaires
- Question could he have done this study
qualitatively? - What were his variables?
- What questions do you think he wanted to answer?
17Variables
- Looking at his research design, we know that he
was testing to see differences - between areas of the country (i.e. does geography
have an influence on - Media message
- The images of people who receive the messages
- Amongst kinds of media
- i.e. does TV differ in its messages from
newspapers or magazines - Over time
- Does media coverage and also the audiences
opinions change over time? - If it does change, do these things vary (change)
in relation to one another?
18How He Wrote it Up
- Patterson divided the book into 4 sections
- How the press covered the campaign
- Here he compared the kinds of content in the
various media - How the audience received the content (in
general) - Comparing their attention to the news, in general
- Looking at the audiences interest in the
campaign - Looking at their reaction to different media
- Looking at any differences between geographic
regions - What kind of Impact (if any) the media had on the
voters ideas and actions. - Their perception of what was important in the
campaign - Their awareness of the various issues
- Their images of the candidates
- Their information of the issues and candidates
- Their view of winners and losers
- Conclusions what is wrong with mass media
politics
19Reading OBarr
- P.1, Paragraph 3
- In this book I explore advertisements from the
past and from abroad in order to develop a more
critical posture toward those we must deal with
every day. By stepping momentarily beyond the
boundaries of the present and the local, we learn
to ask questions about contemporary
advertisements that parallel those we ask more
easily about older ones. In this analysis I focus
on those defined as outsiders (foreigners in
particular, but also Americans who are sometimes
treated like foreigners African Americans and
Native Americans
20Stating Positions and Views
- OBarr tells you his assumptions right away
- His belief that viewing the past helps us better
see the present - His desire to develop a critical perspective
- His definitions of outsider
21Issue How to study the foreign in ads?
- Question what would your approach be?
- For instance
- What sources would you use?
- Would you make an effort to sample every possible
photo ever made about foreigners? Why or why not? - If you decided this is impossible, then would you
just pick photos wherever you found them? Why or
why not? - Would you advertise asking for people to send in
their collected advertisements? If so, where
would you advertise?
22OBarrs Choices
- National Geographic
- Archival collection of Kodak print ads
- Reasons I chose them because they illustrate
how to use cameras and what to photograph in
touristic contexts. They frequently depict both
how the finished photographs should look and ways
to display or show them. Many advertisements for
travel photography deal with foreign peoples and
cultures, offering blueprints for their readers
to use in constructing their own touristic
experiences and about representing otherness.
(P.17)
23Some Issues
- Mixing images from collections problems with
this? - In general, he separated the two collections
- Time is it important to separate into earlier
years and more contemporary years? - What reasons might you use in creating this
distinction? - Separating people and/or places?
- Is this an important principle? Why or why not?
24Categories
- Ultimately, OBarr separates his data into
categories - The 1929 National Geographic was used in one
chapter and 3 broad categories were created - South Africans, Native Americans, Relationships
of Westerners and Non-Westerners - Questions
- Why one year?
- What is the reason for creating categories?
- Is this a deductive or inductive operation?
25Contemporary Representations
- He separated Foreigners into 3 categories
- In Travel Ads
- Product Endorsements
- International Business
- Additional Issues
- relating to threats abroad
- needy foreign children
26African Americans
- An extended gallery of depictions of African
Americans with the demonstration of how images
have changed over time
27How do these studies relate to Truth?
- What is your view of truth?
- Do you believe that there is ultimate truth in
the social world? - Do you believe that truth is an objective of
social science? - Do you believe that a truth should be obtained by
any means possible? - Or, are there limits on how researchers can and
should pursue truth? - What are those limits?
28Some Questions for Thought
- Do you believe that there is ultimate truth in
the social world? - Do you believe that truth is an objective of
social science? - Do you believe that a truth should be obtained by
any means possible? - Or, are there limits on how researchers can and
should pursue truth?