TY - CHAP AB - Barthes (1977) famously argued that the meaning of an image does not become apparent until it is accompanied and explicated by text. Pictures are ambiguous, he suggests, and their interpretation is dependent on words to specify and focus their multiple and uncertain meanings. However, it is also apparent that relationships between texts and images may take many different forms (Becker, 1981; Berger, 1972; Chaplin, 1994; Pink, 2001). Furthermore, for the social scientist, the texts that mediate the meanings of pictures come in two different forms and contexts. There are the words of respondents – captured by interviews, questionnaires and other research devices – and those of social science theory and analysis. Similarly, images may be generated by respondents, by researchers or derived from secondary sources by respondents or researchers. Thus, an examination of the methodological foundations of visual research in social science must address the varied and dynamic interrelationships between pictorial images, interview transcripts and theoretical interpretations, through which meaning is constructed rather than simply found. As Chaplin comments, sociologists make rather than take photographs (1994). VL - 7 SN - 978-1-84950-211-5, 978-0-76231-021-0/1042-3192 DO - 10.1016/S1042-3192(04)07007-7 UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/S1042-3192(04)07007-7 AU - Felstead Alan AU - Jewson Nick AU - Walters Sally ED - Christopher J. Pole PY - 2004 Y1 - 2004/01/01 TI - IMAGES, INTERVIEWS AND INTERPRETATIONS: MAKING CONNECTIONS IN VISUAL RESEARCH T2 - Seeing is Believing? Approaches to Visual Research T3 - Studies in Qualitative Methodology PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 105 EP - 121 Y2 - 2024/04/19 ER -