ABSTRACT

This chapter addresses three restrictions observed within the social sciences that prevent researchers from seeing human beings as such. It proposes an ontological argument in favor of following and analyzing human individuals. The chapter compares phenomenography with some phenomenological approaches in anthropology in order to insist on the methodological radicality of the former. As reflected in philosophy's classic debates, an anthropology that sets out to be anthropo-focused cannot separate an action, connection or experience from the person who performs and lives it. The chapter provides the methodological guidelines concerning, in particular, the possible ways of beginning a phenomenographic research which focuses on the rapper LK. It focuses on what calls a "videophenomenography", which corresponds to the moment where LK agreed to film himself, alone, during the creation of a verse. One particularly interesting device attempted was the realization of a "videophenomenography", in which LK agreed to film himself, alone, during a moment of creation.