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Publication Date
4-2020
Document Type
Poster
Degree Type
Undergraduate
Department
Sociology/Anthropology
Mentor
Thomas Gershick
Mentor Department
Sociology/Anthropology
Abstract
This study asks “what is the experience of people of color in a modern U.S. circus?” and is primarily concerned with granting performers of color control over telling their own story. Given that the circus is a visual art, this study produces visual research that centers participants’ perspectives through photo voice, or participatory photo, which is a visual research methodology that uses participant-generated photos as data. Participants were given disposable cameras and encouraged to photograph their own worlds, identifying the assets and challenges of their circus community. Through qualitative photo-elicitation interviews and a focus group, together we created a space for deep discussion and collaboration as we developed a collective message to share. Because of the impact of spectatorship on performers of color, the research results were displayed in a research exhibit as opposed to a traditional research report. The culminating exhibit along with participants’ increased consciousness is part of the empowerment process at the core of this project. The goal of the exhibit was to create space for the wider community to engage with research results while simultaneously asserting the performers’ right to a self-determined public narrative. Visual research methodologies and the culminating exhibit were chosen for this project because they constitute an empowering form of research while producing results that are more accessible to the non-academic audiences that often directly influence the lives of performers of color. The final exhibit features select participant-generated photos, artistic statements made up of quotes from participant interviews, historical images courtesy of Milner Library Special Collections, studio photography courtesy of Nathan Masciola, and audio tracks set to music courtesy of Brandon Campbell of The Clinic. The exhibit was displayed in Illinois State University’s Rachel Cooper Gallery from February 25, 2020 through summer 2020 and Schroeder Hall Gallery for the academic year 2020-2021. An optional “exit survey” was available at the gallery’s original opening reception on February 25th and was analyzed to help gauge audience’s interaction, understanding, and learning from the exhibition. The research publication consists of a digitized version of the research exhibit as well as a discussion of research methods, results, and implications.
Recommended Citation
Campbell, Radiance, "Performing Color: Participatory Photo and Community Based Research in a Modern U.S. Circus" (2020). Sociology/Anthropology. 2.
https://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/urssocant/2