Tracking Digital Cinema
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt Greenlights av Matthew McConaughey (häftad).
Köp båda 2 för 1163 kr"A leading scholar of cinema and media, Thomas Elsaesser offers a set of theoretical coordinates for both the old and the new media, for the not nearly as dead as we thought, and definitely not as new as we were promised. In this essay collection, media change is pluralised with such flair that it gives a commanding overview of the field of media archaeology, placing it in the wider context of audiovisual culture. The detailed case studies move smoothly between films, genres and modes of expression, developing new vocabularies that are essential for current media and film studies to ensure they stay current. Film History as Media Archaeology is a fantastic continuation and crystallisation of what the Film Culture in Transition book series has done for so many years and over so many volumes: moved film studies into new discussions, combining new empirical insights with theoretical impact that continues to excite. Like Elsaesser, the book series of which he is the General Editor has shifted our guiding questions from the mere "what is cinema" to the critically situated practices: where and when is cinema, where and when is media, and where and when is theory?" - Professor Jussi Parikka, Winchester School of Art/University of Southampton, author of What is Media Archaeology? and A Geology of Media. "With its 50th installment, the Film Culture in Transition book series edited by Thomas Elsaesser for Amsterdam University Press, reaffirms its position as one of the most important and indispensable venues for film and media research in English language academic publishing. With its ground-breaking monographs and edited collections, the series has been driving the debate in our field for more than two decades now. Film History as Media Archaeology illustrates the virtues and qualities of the series in exemplary fashion: A wide-ranging re-assessment of established approaches to film historiography in the light of the challenges offered by digital cinema, the book offers a pivot away from an exclusive focus on the study of canonical works to an understanding of film history as a vital thread of a broader history of media, digital and otherwise. Like so many of the previous volumes in the series, volume 50 is bound to establish itself as a text of reference in contemporary film and media scholarship." - Vinzenz Hediger, professor of cinema studies, Goethe-Universitt Frankfurt "As the field of Film Studies has morphed into Media Studies, no one has better grasped the consequences and opportunities for scholarship than Thomas Elsaesser. He has deftly managed to keep the whole equation of film and media studies in his head, both in his own work and as Film Culture in Transition's series editor. The result is nothing less than an ongoing tour de force as he analyzes contemporary Hollywood cinema in one book, film theory in another, and various permutations of German cinema in still others. Continuing his commitment to Early Cinema, Elsaesser's most recent publication rethinks the terms of film history within a broader framework of media archaeology--a call that has already generated a new, vibrant arena of research and erudition. Not only is Film History as Media Archaeology impressive in its own right, as the 50th volume in Film Culture in Transition, his book series with Amsterdam University Press, Elsaesser has deployed his acumen and rigor to nurture, shape and inspire a generation (or two) of scholars." - professor Charles Musser, Yale University
Thomas Elsaesser (1943-2019) was Professor of Film and Television Studies in the Department of Art and Culture at the University of Amsterdam.
General Introduction. Media Archaeology - Foucault's Legacy I. Early Cinema 1. Film History as Media Archaeology 2. Is Nothing New: Turn-of-the-Century Epistemes in Film History 3. An Invention without a Future, After the Future: Louis Lumiere and Thomas A Edison - Double Paternity or Alternative Paradigms 4. The Cinematic Dispositi between Apparatus Theory and Artists Cinema II. The Challenge of Sound 5. Sounds Beguiling: Franz Hofer's Christmas Bells 6. Going 'Live': Body and Voice in Some Early German Sound Films 7. The Optical Wave: Walter Ruttmann in 1929 III. Archaeologies of Interactivity 8. The Cinema's Turn to Narrative: The Art of Managing Attention 9. Archaeologies of Interactivity: The 'Rube' as Symptom of Media Change 10. Tales of Epiphany and Entropy: Around the World in Eighty Clicks IV. Digital Cinema 11. Digital Cinema: Delivery Event Time 12. Digital Cinema: Convergence or Contradiction 13. Digital Cinema and the Apparatus: Archaeologies, Epistemologies, Ontologies V. New Logics of the Image 14. Stop/Motion 15. The 'Return' of 3-D: On Some of the Logics and Genealogies of the Image in the Twenty-First Century 16. Cinema Energy Entropy 17. Simulation and the Labour of Invisibility: Harun Farocki's Life Manuals VI. Media Archaeology as Symptom 18. Media Archaeology and the Poetics of Obsolescence 19. Media Archaeology as Symptom 20. Selected Bibliography