Abstract
Introduction
This paper discusses the practical foundation of ethnographically informed video analysis by empirically investigating one of the core activities of video research in sociology: the video data session. We are especially interested in how video analysis is conducted
In order to answer these questions, we perform a reflexive
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form of research: the activities in an empirical data session are scrutinized with videographic methodology, recorded and turned into data to make
The sociological interests in the study of research methods have a long tradition within methodological discussions, the sociology of knowledge and
In the next section, we focus on methodological aspects of video data. Subsequently, we give some insights into the video data session as one of the core activities in video research. In this sense, practices of video data analysis are both
Video Technology and Video Data in the Social Sciences
Video data is increasingly used in a variety of research fields focusing on social interactions and related social and cultural phenomena. Prevalent video analytic methods vary in their approaches, ranging from standardized methods that rely heavily on the use of predefined coding schemes to interpretive methods. However, empirical reflection on the actual practices of video analysis are still rare.
The term video refers to a number of different data types in everyday life, as well as research usage for observational studies. They range from so called
One core assumption of the specific version of video analysis we are focusing on—which stems from ethnomethodology and having roots in conversation analysis—is that human conduct and social reality have to be understood as a member’s practical and ongoing accomplishment. In consequence, this approach focuses on interactions, and uses video data to make these interactions accessible for research. There are specific methodological and technical particularities to video technology that we would like to point out. It allows to record
For example, Grimshaw (1982, 122) emphasizes the aspect of permanence of video data, which is associated with a particular density: it allows for a much finer and more precise observation of processes than would be possible with non-technical observation only. In contrast to other research data, such as interviews, which are used to indirectly reconstruct events, video is therefore referred to as the registration-conserving medium (c.f. Bergmann and Luckmann 1995). 3
The Video Data Session as Topic and Resource
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Current empirical studies of knowledge and science have redirected their focus to sociology, especially to social research as a
Data sessions are an important focal point of interpretative work. They are part of the research lifecycle itself, starting for example, with ethnographic fieldwork, recording within the field, and finishing by producing texts about the field and fieldwork done. Even if the process is not in most cases linear and usually
Data sessions can be described as a form of interaction or a communicative genre 5 in which a specific communicative problem is dealt with. The aim of the data session is both to develop initial interpretations of empirical material and to present analyses prepared by individual participants for review. Meier zu Verl (2018) reconstructs ethnographic data sessions in which ethnographers cooperatively analyze their empirical material by highlighting, paraphrasing, and reenacting it in order to reconstruct social reality and to make its sociological relevance audible and/or visible. Ethnographers transform their material into data practically, which means that they gradually treat it as meaningful and sociological relevant in data sessions. Therefore, Meier zu Verl concludes his ethnomethodological “ethnography of ethnography” by characterizing ethnographic research processes as observable data careers: from initial observations to empirical material to data candidates and finally to sociological data (c.f. Schindler 2018; Sormani 2020). Video analyses of video analysis data sessions are still rare. Nevertheless, Tutt and Hindmarsh (2011) deal with video data sessions empirically. Using examples, their analysis breaks down data sessions in terms of their sequential organization by the social researchers taking part in video data sessions. For the authors, analyzing and reconstructing the video means foremost a process of bodily showing and reciprocal naming of relevant elements. One important empirical finding of their study is the reenactment. Reenactments are (methodological) practices used to render video recorded practices visible again and also to make embodied knowledge practically noticeable for oneself and observable for others at the same time. As the authors show, analytic activities are not only a linguistic or purely cognitive assignment, but it is rather the bodily showing and reenacting that plays a central interpretative role in video data sessions. While they describe in detail how social researchers conduct practical reenactments to analyze and interpret their video data, empirically not much is known about the actual interplay of video analysis practices (such as reenactments) and embodied knowledge in video data sessions. Here the communicative constructivist perspective contributes by explaining the relevance of such methods by paying particular attention to the specific problems that the participating subjects are confronted with: Knoblauch and Schnettler (2012, 353) emphasize that “[t]he analysts do not only mirror an activity identified in the fragment. They translate the indexicality of the situation watched on the video into their ‘situative indexicality’.” Thus, reenactments are bodily practices to understand social reality not only through cognition but also through one’s own (inter)corporeal experience in the first place. Extending the domain of academic scientific analysis and also comparing different cases, Tuma (2017) studies the communicative interpretation forms of “vernacular video analysis” (e.g., in market research, police work, or sports analysis) and shows how they are embedded in a “work arc” that is specific to professional fields.
In this paper we take up those findings, but we add upon this research as well, by systematically scrutinizing a case for the different forms of knowledge that are invoked in video data sessions.
We consider reenactments and other communicative forms exhibited as resources and solutions to specific practical and communicative problems of joint interpretation.
Practices of Video Analysis and Different Forms of Knowledge
Based on our activities as founding members of the German researchers’ network videoanalyse.net, we recorded some data sessions which were conducted from 2015 to 2019 and created a wide-ranging corpus of data sessions. These recorded data sessions vary in disciplinary orientation of the participants, who have slightly different theoretical backgrounds (from symbolic interactionism, communicative constructivism, and ethnomethodology to sociolinguistic), methodological approaches (video-ethnography and multimodal video analysis), and research topics.
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It is an essential characteristic of such meetings that researchers with different perspectives and research interests meet and discuss fragments of data. Nevertheless, most participants agree on some basic principles that are common across the field of interpretive video-analysis. For this paper we focus on the reflexive analysis of one specific video data session.
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We recorded the approximately 90-minute data session in which a short video fragment was presented and replayed. The data session was video recorded by us and therefore reflexively turned into a further set of video data that we then subjected to a
Description of the Ethnographic Video Footage
The recorded video data session was part of a two-day workshop. One of the participants (Eric’ all names pseudonymized) had prepared some video data that was part of his current research (meanwhile published in Albrecht 2016) and that is discussed within the group. Most of the participants were neither familiar with the data nor the project itself, however some (e.g. Andy, see further) had been discussing the project with Eric beforehand, including other fragments of data pertaining to it. Eric had been working on his personal videographic study (ethnography using video), which focused on the measurement and evaluation of creativity in the context of engineering work, studied in academic teaching and examination. Thus, he is the only one who is well acquainted with ethnographic knowledge in the field of engineering. The fragment he presents is part of a bigger data corpus that consists of observations, fieldnotes, and video recordings of a specific project-oriented teaching format. The specific video presented by Eric focuses on a situation where a small group of students are discussing the results of an engineering project with the responsible teaching assistant and student tutor who supervised their project. The students are using their notebook and a CAD software, which is typically used for visualization in engineering (i.e. technical blueprints). This presentation is important, as the assistant and tutor are using it as the basis for grading the project, evaluating different aspects of the work, including the creativity of the solution being explained by the students in this situation. Eric was especially interested in the process of evaluation, and how teachers also understand, evaluate, and assess creativity based on situated communication. Figure 1 shows a transcript of his video footage that Eric has presented to the group.

Transcript presented by Eric (see Albrecht 2016; translated by the authors).
This transcript and the accompanying video recording were analyzed by the participants in the data session. In our next four analyses we will show how Eric’s co-participants study this particular fragment of interaction without having the same knowledge of engineering as the ethnographer Eric. We will reveal how these participants achieve new knowledge about this video recorded interaction, which is situated in their analysis as a shared, ongoing, and bodily accomplishment.
Common-sense Knowledge, the Body and Visibility
The following reflexive analysis of the data session shows how knowledge is practically located and marked as
After an introduction to Eric’s PhD project, his video footage is played several times. Eric asks all participants of the video analysis group what might be of sociological interest about the video in general and more specifically how examiners practically assess specific achievements like the creativity of their students. The following extract 9 displays an early walkthrough of the video footage and its transcript. All participants are sociologists, and no one comes from either an engineering or a natural and applied science background. Eric as an ethnographer in the field of engineering therefore has unique explicit and tacit knowledge about this particular video recorded interaction and also about teaching and examining engineers in general.
From line one to line four, Carl begins his reconstruction of the recorded interaction by formulating individual observations that were acknowledged by Eric uttering continuers (lines 2 and 4). These observations were highlighted by Carl as personally interesting places within Eric’s video data (like “so what is interesting for me” line 1). While doing so, Carl orientates himself to the written transcript (line 3), the video recording (Figure 2), and to the video recorded participants, their knowledge, their relevancies, and their interactional orientation to certain objects (line 5). His orientation to the video recording can likewise be seen as a polysemous way of reenactment: Carl is directing his colleagues’ glances onto the display for analytical purposes. In addition, he uses the same gestures (pointing gestures) used by the research participants in Eric’s video footage to direct glances. Thereby, the practical purpose of pointing and directing others’ gazes is practically experienced within the data session and at the same time discussed sociologically (lines 6 and 7). However, this type of reenactment was not explicitly addressed by Carl or anyone else, probably because it could not directly be linked to the concept of creativity.
Afterwards, Carl questions his personal knowledge to fully understand the video recorded actions and finishes his speech by pointing out that there is no assessment formulated (line 8). With the following upshot, Carl reinforces his observation that there is no assessment formulated by giving his colleagues empirical evidence. This form of evidence is achieved by reenacting and verbally highlighting one phrase that is accessible to all through the transcript. However, Carl does not come up with analytical terms. In addition, Carl and Eric were subsequently clarifying which student was actually examined (not part of our transcript, line 10). After this thematic insertion, Andy claims to have more knowledge about the shown video because he had already seen more of Eric’s data, and states that there is an assessment which is actually taking place but is without any readable evidence in the written transcript (line 11). In this sense, certain familiarities with (watching and showing) video data are analytically important as well. Eric confirms Andy’s statement afterward (line 12). Furthermore, Carl confirms Andy’s observation, which partly reformulates the observations he himself had previously addressed. On the other hand, his formulation also questions Andy’s statement (that there is an assessment at all) by asking Andy directly: “and where can you see it?” (line 13). Andy locates his assumption that there is an assessment in line eight in the written transcript and nearly simultaneously begins to play back the video (lines 14–16).
We are reading this transcribed interaction as an ongoing accomplishment of one specific video analytic group. Their analysis is driven by a particular sociological interest in creativity assessments, that is sensitizing the specific form of analysis. Carl describes what he considers to be seen in the video recording by highlighting some moments of the recorded interaction in order to understand their sequential emergence. In this way, he addresses the question of how creativity can be assessed co-operatively without, however, formulating a less descriptive and more conceptual answer for his co-participants. Here, Andy applies a further analytical strategy. He does not transform the observed interaction into his own words, instead he draws on and combines different resources of interpretation, that is, the transcript and the recording itself by playing the video. In doing so, he claims a different epistemic approach. This extract refers to a number of sense making practices arranged in a specific order: (a) The highlighting of possible sociological relevant places in the written transcript, (b) blurring the line between the video recorded situation and the current situation by reenacting gestures with similar interactional purposes, (c) linking the reenacted gestures back to the verbal by phrasing it in conversation analytic terms, (d) calling attention to a gap between these previous empirical observations and the thematic framework previously introduced by Eric, and (e) disagreement within the video analytic group and therefore going back to the video by replaying it once again to locate a possible position where the assessment takes place. Knowledge, and especially
Rendering (Bodily) Knowledge Recognizable
With the next analysis of video analytic practices, we show that professional knowledge can be rendered accountable by reenacting gestures and simultaneously commenting on them. Both practical and communicative interwoven activities enable the ethnographer Eric and his colleagues to (re)activate bodily knowledge and to make sense communicatively. This sensemaking activity in terms of reenacting parts of video footages and commentating on the current reenactment is related to other video analytic practices such as watching and commenting with a certain difference: the bodily reenactment is a preliminary stage before describing something sociologically.
After playing the video once again, the group members begin another attempt to interpret how the video recorded participants (tutors) perform their assessments in practice.
Shortly after this video playback, Andy formulates an interpretation, which is ordered as follows: (a) He indicates that his interpretation is part of his own intuition (“yeah so my assumption is”; line 1), (b) he formulates an overall interpretation of all the video footage (following line 1), (c) at the end of this first statement, he asks his co-participants for their agreement (“right?”; end of line 1), and (d) he continues at the beginning of his next turn by assessing (like a tutor) the technical achievement of the students (“and uh ah I uh we have a solution and not a standard solution”; line 2), and while doing so reenacts a specific gesture (Figure 3). In this way, he indicates verbally and gesturally a change of perspective: from sociologist to participant (skilled engineer). This reenactment by Andy not only creates a quotable object but is also a reenactment of different “roles”: While Andy is reenacting a specific gesture of one of the tutors, his co-interpreters become observers of the (reenacted) gesture itself once again. Following up this assessment, Andy (as a sociologist but implicitly framed as a skilled engineer) relocates his interpretation of an assessment within the video recorded interaction (following line 2), thereby empirically justifying his interpretation. In order to do this, he also verbally reenacts the supposed assessment by changing his voice (“he says then oh, I see”; line 2). Carl disagrees with Andy by pointing out that the enacted tutor’s voice cannot be located in the video footage (“there is no oh, I see or something like that this would mean that there is a change of state token, okay”; line 6). While Andy tries to locate something in the video, he plays it again briefly (line 7) and confirms Carl’s objection afterwards (line 8). Once again, Carl points out that there is no “oh, I see” (line 9) and offers his own interpretation instead. This is questioned by Andy (line 10), followed by Eric’s statement reinforcing that there is an assessment happening that “can somehow” be discovered (line 11). Eric does not reflexively label missing knowledge but rather labels it implicitly and as part of a video analytical discovery.
Most importantly, this extract shows that knowledge (this applies to common-sense knowledge as well, see earlier) has to be (bodily) formulated in this situation to develop analytical and communicative outcomes in data sessions. Andy renders his various interpretations recognizable for himself and his co-interpreters by presenting analytical frameworks (“standard vs. creative solution”), giving empirical evidence (“anyway it is screwed over there, and he reconstructs that by his hand gesture”), and finally by reenacting embodied practices and communicative actions (fig. 2 and line 2 “he says then oh, I see”). These practices and actions make his interpretations livelier and more experienceable for everyone in the room. It also activates the participants subjective knowledge, for example about making an assessment— even if Andy’s interpretation and reenactments are questioned by the others. This extract shows that knowledge and its various forms are mediated not only through the video footage and the transcript itself but also through communicative and embodied practices that transform practical knowledge into recognizable, visible, observable, and in the end accountable forms of certain members’ actions (e.g. actions of engineering tutors). These practices are methodologically underestimated but there are—as we have shown—practically important to gain first-hand insights into social reality. Reenactments are those
Technical Language, Skills and Ethnographic Knowledge
The following analysis shows how apparently ordinary language can be transformed into specific technical language through a particular variation in perception. This variation is practically accomplished by the ethnographer Eric, not only through bodily reenactments but also by referring to (common) semiotic resources which seem to be more available to his co-present colleagues.
Later in the data session, Dana addresses the specific language used by the students and also the tutor in the recording. From her point of view, she classifies their way of speaking as a mundane form of language and voices her confusion about the lack of professional terms that she would have expected in this context (“What I notice again here is that there’s almost no expert lingo. Is it really like that, that they generally communicate at this almost [colloquial] [-] level?”; line 1). She roughly quotes with a short pre-sequence a sentence “For instance this ‘I checked, there’s plenty of room’.” (line 1) from the data played before, which is also represented in the transcript (see Figure 1, line 10) that is available to her, as well as to the other members of the interpretation group. Her quoting, as well as the previous reenacting by Andy (Figure 3) can be seen as an epistemic practice to produce audible and visible evidence for her co-participants and to use this situated produced evidence as proof for previously introduced interpretations. Her remark (line 1) that mundane language can be understood as a missing expertise of the engineers evokes a short burst of laughter among the group. She asks, addressing indirectly Eric, who, as mentioned before, knows the whole data corpus and was responsible for ethnographic research, whether this is specific for this short sequence or a general characteristic of the situation. Eric begins with a quick confirmation implicitly based on his ethnographic knowledge that this use of language can be generalized (“Most of the time they talk like that”; line 4). He then goes on to explain that the used terms are not to be seen as vernacular; rather they are present forms of professional language that can only be read and understood with specialist knowledge (by mentioning, i.e., the concept of indexicality “But you still don’t understand when you don’t know what it’s about, but it is…. I would say strongly indexical, i.e. they’re talking about mounting and screwing on, that refers to very specific actions.”; line 6). He elaborates on this by explaining the differences between “montieren / mounting” and “aufschrauben / screwing” (line 6).
Particularly interesting in Eric’s prolonged explanation is how he relates the specificity of the seemingly vernacular language to the specific context of construction work. Using the example of the fixation of rotating machine parts, he addresses the complexities of the engineering process. His explanation draws not only on his conceptional knowledge of engineering, which he articulates in the description of certain examples of problems and the details that engineers need to consider on the basis of their instruction (blueprints and the use of specific tools), but he also makes certain “instructed action” (Garfinkel 2002, 197–218) accountable by using a specific hand gesture (fig. 4, 5) to accompany his speech in order to make his expert knowledge visible (c.f. Sormani 2014, 123–4). By enacting “mounting” and “screwing” with turning movements of his hand with open fingers, he makes the specific engineering knowledge not only accessible through language but also available in a performative imaginative space, bodily, by enacting the material and three-dimensional structure and working of the machinery. He enacts the main screwing with his left hand and combines the gesture with a specific finger movement of his right hand, thus performing the fixation of smaller screws that fix the entire connection.
First and foremost, the sequence has shown how field knowledge (i.e. knowledge of engineering) is brought into video data sessions as a specific use of natural language and its indexicality that must be specifically understood within this field. To achieve this, the explanation of Eric the ethnographer is necessary: he explains the utterances in the transcript based on the specific acquaintance with the engineers’ expert knowledge, which he has acquired during his research. Second, he uses a specific form to make his explanations accountable through the field-specific distinction between
Making a Perception Visible as a Fallacy
We have already shown that the analytical knowledge that is necessary to interpret video footage is continuously produced, assessed, relativized, etc. among all participants to identify and describe phenomena of possible relevance. With our last analysis we showed that situationally produced findings can be revised by co-participants much like any other resource for video analysis.
At the end of the data session, some participants discuss more focused conceptual implications of the specific gesture displayed in the video. This gesture, that Eric enacted in his practical reasoning (Figures 4 and 5), becomes the explicit subject once again, albeit now directly associated with the observed movements on screen as an iconic gesture of screwing. This short sequence of hand movements is repeatedly played by Andy and the group focuses on it.
In this last extract from video, Andy states why he does not understand the actions of the participants on screen by making a description that unfolds close to the temporality of the video footage and helps him to make his non-understanding comprehensible for his co-participants (line 1). At first Andy introduces his following description as part of a personal confusion, which enables him to go back to a previous point of analysis (“What still bothers me is actual”; line 1). For his verbal description, Andy also uses the playback of the video as an evidencing instance and does not reenact any gestures from the material (as we have seen earlier). In this case Andy directs the attention of his co-participants with a pointing gesture to parts of the video that are relevant for his description (Figure 6). Then, at the end of his turn, Andy announces his expected course of the interaction, which does not correspond to the recorded course (“I would have actually expected that he would sit down and somehow turn the thing around in the computer”; line 1). He tries to understand the actions of the participants in context and uses his own pragmatic expectations of the course of events (as established in the former sequence 4.3) to hermeneutically project other possible solutions to the participants’ problems of action. After this announcement of expected events by Andy, Bert begins his statement by agreeing on Andy’s expected assumptions and then gives a detailed verbal description of which hand does what, by whom (“That’s what he’s doing with his hand, isn’t it? (.) Like, the left hand that he’s rotating, that’s not the one from the guy in white, I mean, in the white t-shirt, rather from the guy at the computer”; line 2). While Andy’s description still implicitly assumes one gesturing person, with Bert’s description it becomes public and explicit that the two gesturing hands are from two different persons. In other words, in the video you can see two gestures that are synchronous but not directly related to each other. It is somehow a visual illusion that is caused by perspective of the filming camera. After Bert’s adjustment, Eric reenacts the same two gestures with his own two hands and begins to confirm also verbally this (new) observation (line 3). Directly following Eric’s turn, Andy articulates a “change of state token” (Heritage 1984) and thus makes public his change of stance to his co-participants (line 4). Following this, Bert again describes the two gestures and goes into more detail about the belonging of the two individual hands (line 5). Eric also reenacts the two gestures, making both visible again, while highlighting the misreading of the video (Figures 7 and 8). At the same time, Carl makes the two gestures (Figure 8), while Andy still looks at the screen. Carl also confirms this new situated understanding by saying “that is the other hand” (line 7) and then reenacting just one of the two gestures in the reverse direction (Figure 9). Following Carl’s confirmation, Andy displays his amusement over his misunderstanding by performing an overly expressive “smack to the head” gesture accompanied by a wide grin (Figure 10).
This extract not only shows epistemic practices of reenacting and of replaying specific movements that are on the screen but also that they can be analytically and sequentially put into an order by participants as an ongoing achievement to discover a visual fallacy. As we have seen, this practice of discovering a fallacy follows a similar sequential organization of turns as seen in the previously analyzed extracts. But this time it is much more distributed and carried out in a certain order by four co-participants. For example, Andy describes the interaction he observed in the video and tries to make his description plausible by replaying the video. Or Bert also describes this interaction, followed by reenactments of Eric and Carl. These descriptions, but also these reenactments are produced context-sensitive and therefore follow different relevancies. More importantly, they deal with various practical and epistemic problems that emerge in the data session itself. Insights are therefore, so to speak, produced
Conclusion
We conclude our video analysis of video analytic practices by emphasizing our findings and addressing different aspects of common-sense, professional and ethnographic knowledge as a situated achievement of joint video data sessions. We want to emphasize the sequential organization of our analyzed interactions, with which the observed participants developed and proved their new insights practically and co-operatively. The video data session is discussed as a central part of research in the methodological literature (c.f. subsection 2), but without including empirical descriptions of the practice to develop new methodologies. Our empirical and self-reflexive video analysis of video analysis helps to uncover various practices of doing video analysis. It is an ongoing process and it brings together methodology and empirical findings in a new way: an empirically based video methodology. 10 Our main argument is that practices of data analyses are observably interwoven with different forms of knowledge, which are systematically integrated and checked against each other. This is an aspect that is highlighted by philosophical traditions like phenomenology and hermeneutic but also by ethnomethodology and communicative constructivism. They address sociality and knowledge even more explicitly in contrast to other less ethnographic traditions of social research. 11
Our analysis of the practice of video analysis shows that common-sense and ethnographic knowledge instruct our perception of seeing (and hearing) video data and can therefore to be understood as enabling resources. This is not a purely theoretical problem; rather, it is a practical problem that participants in data sessions have to deal with by employing practical strategies, such as labelling assumed missing knowledge, requesting and making explicit more information about the ethnographic field that is being examined (extract 1). This pertains to not only clear discursive questions but also more subtle aspects such as tacit or bodily forms of knowledge that are essential to make sense of video recordings. Embodied knowledge as visible practices is highlighted practically by reenacting it. It is of methodological importance that these reenactments create quotable bodily objects and make bodily experiences analytically available. This availability is crucial for understanding the organization of a data session, because we can observe temporarily different roles within the video analytic group in the course of their interactions: (a) the reenactor who is bodily performing the visible movements and (b) his colleagues who observe his or her transformation as specific observers. Reenactments analytically transform not only the interpreter who reenacts them but also his or her co-interpreters as observing witnesses of actual reenactments (extract 2). They are methodological and practical important devices—not only for highlighting bodily knowledge but also for tentatively producing findings that are initially expressed bodily and then have to be transformed into words subsequently. Furthermore, they can be used as device of proof for previous descriptions and interpretations through practical validation (extract 3).
The video data is interpreted and gradually reinterpreted, by referring to the ethnographic knowledge gathered during fieldwork, which is then used for a context-specific interpretation of (verbal) articulations and turns. The meaning of the (spoken) statements in focus is interpreted by the group on the basis of the field-specific insider’s knowledge, for example, the specific meaning of language and terms (extract 3) that appear to be mundane, but which are reinterpreted as very technical and as existing within one specific profession. However, verbal expressions are not disentangled but rather are understood in relation with bodily reenactments that have previously been established as quotable.
The participants in the video data session apply a pragmatic motive based on the reconstruction of situational relevancies and the available resources. The sequential order of the ongoing action is reconstructed based on the alignment of the actor’s perspective. Irritations and
The interpretation is guided not only by the reconstruction of the actions but also by the research questions at hand, 12 that is, by the sociological relevance and therefore by a specific professional vision of professional sociologists (extract 1 and footnote 6). Even if this aims at the reconstruction of members’ knowledge, this interest is connected to sociological thinking.
We want to emphasize that our empirical findings methodologically reinforce the relevance of ethnography, ethnographically acquired knowledge, and common-sense knowledge for the practical conduct of video analysis. If we take Schuetz (1953) and Garfinkel (2002) and their postulates of adequate sociological descriptions seriously, we have to take actual video analytic practices into account in order to reformulate our methodological considerations. These reformulated methodologies can be achieved—as we have shown—by expanding them empirically and by describing reflexively methodological practices such as
The participants in the video data session combine different forms of knowledge by confronting and examining the data with each other. New ideas are brought up on the basis of sociological questions (extract 1), and reenactments, as quotable epistemic objects, are shown again on screen and made accessible through performance and visibility (extract 2 and 3). They are put into question by the researcher’s ethnographic knowledge. If these different forms of knowledge are brought into unison, it is likely that the participants are either accepting the situated interpretation as sound or revising it (extract 4). Even if interpretive video research is not based on a general logic of testing, a logic of falsification can be employed in a complex manner during video data sessions.
