J
Jane Davison
Researcher at Royal Holloway, University of London
Publications - 22
Citations - 1430
Jane Davison is an academic researcher from Royal Holloway, University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visual rhetoric & Visual research. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 22 publications receiving 1230 citations. Previous affiliations of Jane Davison include Brunel University London.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Visual Management Studies: Empirical and Theoretical Approaches*
Emma Bell,Jane Davison +1 more
TL;DR: The field of visual research in management studies is developing rapidly and has reached a point of maturity where it is useful to bring together and evaluate existing work in this area and to critically assess its current impact and future prospects.
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[In]visible [in]tangibles: Visual portraits of the business élite
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors construct a framework from art theory to interpret portraits of the business elite and their associated intangibles, and identify four sets of rhetorical codes in portraiture: physical, dress, spatial and interpersonal.
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Photographs and accountability: cracking the codes of an NGO
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors formulate an analytical model for interpreting photographs in accountability statements from Barthes' celebrated theoretical work on photography, La chambre claire, and offer a study of the communication of accountability by an NGO through the first detailed analysis, within accountability literature, of one photograph.
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Rhetoric, repetition, reporting and the “dot.com” era: words, pictures, intangibles
TL;DR: In this article, a conceptual framework of repetition in signifiants (from rhetoric) and signifies (from philosophy, notably Barthes, Deleuze, Eliade and Jankelevitch) is used to analyse BT plc's Annual Reviews from 1996-2001.
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Visualising accounting: an interdisciplinary review and synthesis
TL;DR: Visual forms constitute representation (incremental information) or construction (impression management) or both. as discussed by the authors defines the visual broadly to include pictures, photographs, film, architecture, diagrams, advertisements and web pages that appear in a wide variety of documentary and geographical locations.