What photo essays have or could you develop to visualize and share your material, and as evidence for your narratives and arguments?

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June 5, 2022

I really want to run a photovoice project with students in Santa Ana high schools. This lends itself really well to the creation of a photo essay in collaboration with the students, whose transcribed accounts of the photographs would accompany them. These photo essays might be focused on the infrastructure of a particular school, what a student encounters on their daily travels to and from schools, or a hazard that they're familiar with in their neighborhood, among other things.

June 4, 2022

We have at least two photo essays that collect Tweets focused on a specific theme (College Students and Internet) and one that highlights data visualizations focused on specific survey questions (Awareness of Energy Assistance Programs). There are a total of four photo essays, two were students projects and two were experiments. I’m not convinced that photo essays are the best mechanism for curating our work. 

 

June 3, 2022
In response to:

I am planning to eventually create a photo essay that tracks the development of Austin’s contemporary racial geography through time, from early paintings, maps, city plans, etc. to contemporary data visualizations.

Gina Hakim's picture
June 1, 2022

As I continue to gather more photos and images, I think one photo essay could be on current photos of Urequio’s natural wells, which are all named and had a use (most have dried up, some have been blocked up, and one or two are being restored). Another idea is for a photo essay representing irrigation of the agricultural fields, and another for the infrastructure for running water. Together, I think these can represent the multiplicity of Urequio’s water infrastructure histories.