Criteria for Analyzing Visuals

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The primary purpose of this chapter is to help you analyze visuals and write about them. In your college courses, some of you will be asked to write entire papers in which you analyze one or more visuals (a painting or a photo, for example). Some of you will write papers in which you include analysis of one or more visual texts within the context of a larger written essay (say, by analyzing the brochures and ads authorized by a political candidate, in an argument about her campaign).

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Of course, learning to analyze visuals effectively can also help you gain a more complete understanding of any document that uses visuals but that is not entirely or predominantly composed of them. Why did the author of a remembered event essay, for example, choose a particular photo of a person mentioned in the text—does it reinforce the written description, add to it, or contradict it in some way? If there is a caption under the photo, how does it affect the way we read it? In a concept explanation, why are illustrations of one process included but not those of another? How well do the charts and graphs work with the text to help us understand the author’s explanation? Understanding what visuals can do for a text can also help you effectively integrate images, charts, graphs, and other visuals into your own essays, whatever your topic.

The chart above outlines key criteria for analyzing visuals and provides questions for you to ask about documents that include them.

CRITERIA FOR ANALYZING VISUALS

KEY COMPONENTS

Composition

  • Of what elements is the visual composed?
  • What is the focal point—that is, the place your eyes are drawn to?
  • From what perspective do you view the focal point? Are you looking straight ahead at it, down at it, or up at it? If the visual is a photograph, what angle was the image shot from—straight ahead, looking down or up?
  • What colors are used? Are there obvious special effects employed? Is there a frame, or are there any additional graphical elements? If so, what do these elements contribute to your “reading” of the visual?

People/Other Main Figures

  • If people are depicted, how would you describe their age, gender, subculture, ethnicity, profession, level of attractiveness, and socioeconomic class? How do these factors relate to other elements of the image?
  • Who is looking at whom? Do the people represented seem conscious of the viewer’s gaze?
  • What do the facial expressions and body language tell you about power relationships (equal, subordinate, in charge) and attitudes (self-confident, vulnerable, anxious, subservient, angry, aggressive, sad)?

Scene

  • If a recognizable scene is depicted, what is its setting? What is in the background and the foreground?
  • What has happened just before the image was “shot”? What will happen in the next scene?
  • What, if anything, is happening just outside of the visual frame?

Words

  • If text is combined with the visual, what role does the text play? Is it a slogan? A famous quote? Lyrics from a well-known song?
  • If the text help you interpret the visual’s overall meaning, what interpretive clues does it provide?
  • What is the tone of the text? Humorous? Elegiac? Ironic?

Tone

  • What tone, or mood, does the visual convey? Is it lighthearted, somber, frightening, shocking, joyful? What elements in the visual (color, composition, words, people, setting) convey this tone?

CONTEXT(S)

Rhetorical Context

  • What is the visual’s main purpose? Are we being asked to buy a product? Form an opinion or judgment about something? Support a political party’s candidate? Take some other kind of action?
  • Who is its target audience? Children? Men? Women? Some sub- or super-set of these groups (e.g., African American men, “tweens,” seniors)?
  • Who is the author? Who sponsored its publication? What background/associations do the author and the sponsoring publication have? What other works have they produced?
  • Where was it published, and in what form? Online? On television? In print? In a commercial publication (a sales brochure, billboard, ad) or an informational one (newspaper, magazine)?
  • If the visual is embedded within a document that is primarily written text, how do the written text and the visual relate to each other? Do they convey the same message, or are they at odds in any way? What does the image contribute to the written text? Is it essential or just eye candy?
  • Social Context. What is the immediate social and cultural context within which the visual is operating? If we are being asked to support a certain candidate, for example, how does the visual reinforce or counter what we already know about this candidate? What other social/cultural knowledge does the visual assume its audience already has?
  • Historical Context. What historical knowledge does it assume the audience already possesses? Does the visual refer to other historical images, figures, events, or stories that the audience would recognize? How do these historical references relate to the visual’s audience and purpose?
  • Intertextuality. How does the visual connect, relate to, or contrast with any other significant texts, visual or otherwise, that you are aware of? How do such considerations inform your ideas about this particular visual?