Synopses & Reviews
The production, distribution, and perception of moving images are undergoing a radical transformation. Ever-faster computers, digital technology, and microelectronic are joining forces to produce advanced audiovision -the media vanishing point of the 20th century. Very little will remain unchanged.
The classic institutions for the mediation of film - cinema and television - are revealed to be no more than interludes in the broader history of the audiovisual media. This book interprets these changes not simply as a cultural loss but also as a challenge: the new audiovisions have to be confronted squarely to make strategic intervention possible.
Audiovisions provides a historical underpinning for this active approach. Spanning 100 years, from the end of the 19th to the end of the 20th century, it reconstructs the complex genesis of cinema and television as historically relative - and thus finite - cultural forms, focussing on the dynamics and tension in the interaction between the apparatus and its uses. The book is also a plea for "staying power" in studies of cultural technology and technological culture of film.
Essayistic in style, it dispenses with complicated cross references and, instead, is structured around distinct historical phases. Montages of images and text provide supplemental information, contrast, and comment.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [319]-345) and index.
Table of Contents
Preface to the English Editionand#160;
Orientation: At the End of the History of Cinema and Television Prolegomena to a History of Audiovisionand#160;
1. Vanishing Point -- CinemaThe Founding Years of Audiovision
2. Between the WarsBetween the Dispositifs
3. Vanishing Point Television?and#160;On the Permeation of Familial Privateness by Televisuality
4. No Longer Cinema, No Longer TelevisionThe Beginning of a New Historical and Cultural Form of the Audiovisual Discourseand#160;
ConclusionGood Machines, Bad MachinesFor Living Heterogeneity in the Arts of Picture and Sound -- Against Psychopathia Medialisand#160;NotesBibliographyAcknowledgementsIndex