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- W208862538 abstract "Although visual images emerged in last century as one of most pervasive forms of communication, their enormous social, historical, and cultural power as cultural texts is largely ignored in schools. Yet, visual images, and experiences associated with seeing or being seen, saturate public and private spaces and influence how children, adolescents, and teachers learn, perform, or transform their identities, values, and behaviors. Further, images as visual culture, participate within networks of culturally mediated processes and power relations while they appear as common sense (Hall, 1996a) or the way it is. Art teachers and students need to examine these encounters with images and how meaning is negotiated by viewers through these culturally learned lenses, sociocultural contexts, and embodied experiences. The meanings of most images today are commonly learned in multimodal 'televisual' environments in which interpretations are linked to dramatic stories and music. Here people encounter mass media images that are designed to sell products, politicians, versions of history, or other cultural views by linking them with narratives, symbolic desires and pleasures. I use metaphor cultural narratives, or social stories, to imply that humans interpret visual culture through broad intertextual links that influence them to construct meanings as modes of representation that tell social stories (Friedman, 1998; Pauly, 2002). These narratives refer to how history is told, what is considered culturally valuable, how social identities are imagined, who is considered beautiful, and what is more possible to think or imagine in future. Most people unconsciously perform messages implied by images they encounter in multiple sociocultural locations (Moore, 1994). Yet individuals fail to critique their influence or acknowledge their own potential to transform negative messages through alternative social acts, such as artmaking. Visual Culture in Teacher Education According to Zeichner et al. (1996) there is a need for research in teacher education that prepares pre-service teachers to apply research on (p. 200). Zeichner describes reflective practice as helping student teachers internalize dispositions and skills that they will need to study their own practice over course of their professional development. This preparation should include experiences in which they investigate culturally learned meaning that they associate with visual images. This critical stance has been echoed in art education by those who advocate study of visual culture (Duncan et al., 2001; Freedman, in press; Tavin, 2001). Duncum (2002) proposes Visual Culture Art Education (VCAE) as a new paradigm for art education in which teachers and students critique and make images with goal of understanding roles that images play in society as well as importance of images in their own experiences. Tavin (1999) suggests art educators ask fundamental questions such as: What do students learn from images?... Do these images provide or signify a certain lifestyle or feeling?...Do these images embody sexist, racist, and class-specific interests? What are historical conditions under which these images are organized and regulated? How is power displayed or connoted throughout these images? (p. 1) Freedman-Norberg (1998) recommends that: Educators provide young people with tools to become wiser consumers of both products and ideas...[that] they see on television and those in movies, as part of video and computer games, on Web, on packaging, and so on-in other words, relationship between all mass-produced images...How does image influence or alter, conflict with or connect to, your sense of reality? (p. 4). Wilson (2000) and Garoian (2001) suggest that experience of interpreting visual culture is like a rhizome system of roots, shoots and nodes; that is, people juxtapose complex connections to visual images and move in multiple paths of memory and association that may break down and reappear in new connections. …" @default.
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- W208862538 date "2003-04-01" @default.
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- W208862538 title "Interpreting Visual Culture as Cultural Narratives in Teacher Education" @default.
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- W208862538 doi "https://doi.org/10.1080/00393541.2003.11651743" @default.
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