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Original Essays | November 5, 2009

John Buntin: IMG Notes from the (Bibliographic) Underground



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New Philosophy for New Media

New Philosophy for New Media Cover

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

In New Philosophy for New Media Mark Hansen defines the image in digital art in terms that go beyond the merely visual. Arguing that the "digital image" encompasses the entire process by which information is made perceivable, he places the body in a privileged position?as the agent that filters information in order to create images. By doing so, he counters prevailing notions of technological transcendence and argues for the indispensability of the human in the digital era.

Hansen examines new media art and theory in light of Henri Bergson's argument that affection and memory render perception impure?that we select only those images precisely relevant to our singular form of embodiment. Hansen updates this argument for the digital age, arguing that we filter the information we receive to create images rather than simply receiving images as preexisting technical forms. This framing function yields what Hansen calls the "digital image." He argues that this new "embodied" status of the frame corresponds directly to the digital revolution: a digitized image is not a fixed representation of "reality," but is defined by its complete flexibility and accessibility. It is not just that the interactivity of new media turns viewers into users; the image itself has become the body's process of perceiving it.

To illustrate his account of how the body filters information in order to create images, Hansen focuses on new media artists who follow a "Bergsonist vocation"; through concrete engagement with the work of artists like Jeffrey Shaw, Douglas Gordon, and Bill Viola, Hansen explores the contemporary aesthetic investment in the affective, bodily basis of vision. The book includes over 70 illustrations (in both black and white and color) from the works of these and many other new media artists.

Review:

"Hansen's work makes a significant shift by approaching new media through affect and sensation, rather than techniques, forms or aesthetics. His thesis reintroduces reception in a sophisticated way, countering posthuman 'machinism' with a productive notion of the human engaged in an entangled, affective coevolution with technology. This is an important and invigorating reorientation." Mitchell Whitelaw, Lecturer in New Media, University of Canberra, Australia, author of Metacreation: Art and Artificial Life

Review:

"New Philosophy for New Media is a major contribution to the question of digital media and art. Unlike too many other writers on the subject, Hansen is able to approach his topic in relation to the most profound efforts of the philosophical tradition and his highly original take on the question is one that recognizes the media specificity of the digital in its novelty while insisting on the continuing importance of the body in the practice of new media art. The book pursues its thesis of the place of the human in face of digitized information in a rigorous, systematic manner." Mark Poster, University of California, Irvine

Review:

"New Philosophy for New Media brilliantly theorizes the coevolution of the human body and the digital technosphere through the radical aesthetic interface provided by new media artworks themselves. Hansen offers a strong, subtle, and ultimately exciting argument that our bodies, brought into contact with the digital in these new ways, experience the virtual. He also vividly testifies to these new experiences of perception and embodiment that emerge in the process: the affects of bewilderment and vertigo, disorientation and irrelevance." Kathleen Woodward, Director, Simpson Center for the Humanities, and Professor of English, University of Washington

Synopsis:

A philosophy of new media that defines the digitalimage as the process by which the body filters information tocreate images.

Synopsis:

To illustrate his account of how the body filters information in order to create images, Hansen focuses on new media artists who follow a Bergsonist vocation; through concrete engagement with the work of artists like Jeffrey Shaw, Douglas Gordon, and Bill Viola, Hansen explores the contemporary aesthetic investment in the affective, bodily basis of vision. The book includes over 70 illustrations (in both black and white and color) from the works of these and many other new media artists.

About the Author

Mark B. N. Hansen is Professor of English and Cinema/Media Studies at the University of Chicago.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780262083218
Foreword:
Lenoir, Tim
Publisher:
The MIT Press
Author:
Lenoir, Timothy
Author:
Hansen, Mark B. N.
Location:
Cambridge, Mass.
Subject:
Philosophy
Subject:
Aesthetics
Subject:
Body, human
Subject:
Digital video
Subject:
Digital media
Subject:
Image
Subject:
Digital art
Edition Description:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Series Volume:
03-21
Publication Date:
20040301
Binding:
Hardback
Language:
English
Illustrations:
72
Pages:
361
Dimensions:
9 x 7 in

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