Results for ' Visual Culture'

997 found
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  1.  3
    Visual culture and the forensic: culture, memory, ethics.David Houston Jones - 2022 - New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group.
    David Houston Jones builds a bridge between practices conventionally understood as forensic, such as crime scene investigation, and the broader field of activity which the forensic now designates, for example performance and installation art, as well as photography. Contemporary work in these areas responds both to forensic evidence, including crime scene photography, and to some of the assumptions underpinning its consumption. It asks how we look, and in whose name, foregrounding and scrutinising the enduring presence of voyeurism in visual (...)
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  2.  3
    Archaeology's visual culture: digging and desire.Roger Balm - 2016 - Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
    Archaeology's Visual Culture explores archaeology through the lens of visual culture theory. The insistent visuality of archaeology is a key stimulus for the imaginative and creative interpretation of our encounters with the past, acknowledging the multiplicity of meanings that cohere around artifacts, archaeological sites and museum displays. Archaeology's Visual Culture investigates the nature of this projection, revealing an embedded subjectivity in the imagery of archaeology. Using a wide range of case studies the book highlights (...)
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  3.  56
    Visual Culture and the Fight for Visibility.Markus Schroer - 2014 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 44 (2):206-228.
    The article explores the relationship between visual culture and the fight for visibility and attention in contemporary society. It draws on a concept of visual culture which not only sees the rising significance of the visual and the proliferation of images as its defining traits, but also the fact that, today, people are—to a much higher degree—both consumers as well as producers of images. Based on this definition, it is argued that in visually oriented communication (...)
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  4.  9
    On images, visual culture, memory and the play without a script.Matthias Smalbrugge - 2021 - New York: T&T Clark.
    Matthias Smalbrugge compares modern images to plays without a script: while they appear to refer to a deeper identity or reality, it is ultimately the image itself that truly matters. He argues that our modern society of images is the product of a destructive tendency in the Christian notion of the image in general, and Augustine of Hippo's in particular. This insight enables him to decode our current 'scripts' of image. As we live in an increasingly visual culture, (...)
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  5.  5
    Tantric visual culture: a cognitive approach.Sthaneshwar Timalsina - 2015 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    Indian culture relies greatly on visual expression, and this book uses both classical Indian and contemporary Western philosophies and current studies on cognitive sciences, and applies them to contextualize Tantric visual culture. It utilizes the contemporary theories of metaphor and cognitive blend, the theory of metonymy, and a holographic theory of epistemology with a focus on concept formation and its application to the study of myths and images. It applies the classical aesthetic theory of rasa to (...)
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  6.  8
    The aesthetic dimension of visual culture.Ondřej Dadejík & Jakub Stejskal (eds.) - 2010 - Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    How can aesthetic enquiry contribute to the study of visual culture? There seems to be little doubt that aesthetic theory ought to be of interest to the study of visual culture. For one thing, aesthetic vocabulary has far from vanished from contemporary debates on the nature of our visual experiences and its various shapes, a fact especially pertinent where dissatisfaction with vulgar value relativism prevails. Besides, the very question ubiquitous in the debates on visual (...)
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  7.  10
    Image science: iconology, visual culture, and media aesthetics.W. J. T. Mitchell - 2015 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Art history on the edge : iconology, media, and visual culture -- Four fundamental concepts of image science -- Image science -- Image X text -- Realism and the digital image -- Migrating images : totemism, fetishism, idolatry -- The future of the image : Rancière's road not taken -- World pictures : globalization and visual culture -- Media aesthetics -- There are no visual media -- Back to the drawing board : architecture, sculpture, and (...)
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  8.  6
    Henri Bergson and visual culture: a philosophy for a new aesthetic.Paul Atkinson - 2021 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    What does it mean to see time in the visual arts and how does art reveal the nature of time? Paul Atkinson investigates these questions through the work of the French philosopher Henri Bergson, whose theory of time as duration made him one of the most prominent thinkers of the fin de siècle. Although Bergson never enunciated an aesthetic theory and did not explicitly write on the visual arts, his philosophy gestures towards a play of sensual differences that (...)
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  9.  72
    Interpreting visual culture: explorations in the hermeneutics of the visual.Ian Heywood & Barry Sandywell (eds.) - 1999 - New York: Routledge.
    Interpreting Visual Culture brings together the writings of some of the leading experts in art history, philosophy, sociology and cultural studies to look at the role of perception and the "visual" in our understanding of the contemporary human condition. Ranging from an analysis of the role of vision in current critical discourse to a discussion of specific examples taken from the visual arts, ethics and sociology, this collection presents the latest material on the interpretation of the (...)
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  10.  12
    Visual Culture in Contemporary China: Paradigms and Shifts by Xiaobing Tang.Man-Fung Yip - 2017 - Philosophy East and West 67 (4):1305-1307.
    In his fine and thought-provoking book, Visual Culture in Contemporary China: Paradigms and Shifts, Xiaobing Tang presents a short history of visual culture in China from the mid-twentieth century to the present, a period that corresponds to the entire history of the People's Republic of China. Examining an array of artwork in various media and genres, from woodblock prints and oil paintings to films, Tang strives to excavate a vital tradition of socialist visual culture (...)
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  11.  8
    Visual Culture and the Holocaust.Barbie Zelizer (ed.) - 2001 - Rutgers University Press.
    How does one represent the Holocaust? What does it mean to visualize it? Despite Theodor Adorno's famous injunction that there can be no poetry after the Holocaust, the past half century has produced repeated attempts to impart that which has been considered beyond the limits of representation. From Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List, Claude Lanzmann's epic documentary project _Shoah_, to Art Spiegelman's _Maus_, the visual domain has emerged as a fruitful venue for representing those horrible times. _Visual Culture and (...)
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  12.  20
    The Visual Culture of the Rising Generation.V. P. Zinchenko - 1975 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 14 (1):29-37.
    This problem is not a new one, but it is hardly likely that anyone will contend that it is not timely. It is all the more important because entirely too little attention has hitherto been given, in our schools and higher educational institutions, to visual and aesthetic education. Yet for the man of today visual culture is not the least bit less important than the culture of verbal communication, including that in written form, to which considerable (...)
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  13.  31
    Visual Culture” as Neoliberal Aesthetic Education.Chris Peers - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 52 (2):95.
    This article addresses a discourse on visual culture and its comparability to visual arts in school curriculum; it focuses initially on Kevin Tavin’s 2005 history of popular and visual culture in relation to visual-art education.1 In the second part, I also discuss contributions to this discourse by Kerry Freedman2 and Paul Duncum.3 There are two concerns that I raise here about arguments made against visual-arts curriculum in this discourse. First, they are generally lacking (...)
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  14.  11
    Commentary: Visual Cultures, Publication Technologies, and Legitimation in the Life Sciences.Lynn K. Nyhart - 2023 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 46 (2-3):283-293.
    This paper comments on five articles in the special issue “Circulating Images in the Life Sciences.” It sees the papers as unified by two themes. The first is their attention to the processes of legitimation. The second is the embedding of the images in textual cultures, which changed over time from the mid‐nineteenth century to the very recent past, most notably with the recent advent of digital culture.
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  15.  10
    Exploring Visual Culture: Definitions, Concept, Contexts (review).Paul Duncum - 2008 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 42 (1):118-120.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Exploring Visual Culture: Definitions, Concept, ContextsPaul DuncumExploring Visual Culture: Definitions, Concept, Contexts, edited by Matthew Rampley. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005, 257 pp., $32.00 paper.I review this new introductory text in light of its competition as a textbook for undergraduates and as an introduction for graduate students. Other such texts include Barnard, Elkins, Mirzeoff, Walker and Chaplin, and Sturken and Cartwright,1 which appears to (...)
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  16.  33
    Visual Culture Education Through the Philosophy for Children Program.Yong-Sock Chang & Ji–Young Kim - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 37:27-34.
    The appearance of mass media and a versatile medium of videos can serve the convenience and instructive information for children; on the other hand, it could abet them in implicit image consumption. Now is the time for kids' to be in need of thinking power which enables them to make a choice, applications andcriticism of information within such visual cultures. In spite of these social changes, the realities are that our curriculum still doesn't meet a learner's demand properly. This (...)
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  17.  21
    The Ethics of Visual Culture.Elizabeth M. Bucar - 2016 - Journal of Religious Ethics 44 (1):7-16.
    To introduce this set of essays on visual ethics, I address the conceptual and methodological contours, as well as difficult theoretical questions, that might emerge with a visual turn in religious ethics. In addition I situate the work represented in this focus issue within ongoing conversations about moral perception, culture as a topic of normative analysis, and the various roles of visual culture in the moral life.
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  18.  4
    Visual Culture and Ancient History.Jaś Elsner - 2015 - Classical Antiquity 34 (1):33-73.
    Through a specific example, this paper explores the problems of empiricism and ideology in the uses of material-cultural and visual evidence for the writing of ancient history. The focus is on an Athenian documentary stele with a fine relief from the late fifth century bc, the history of its publications, and their failure to account for the totality of the object's information—sculptural and epigraphic—let alone the range of rhetorical ambiguities that its texts and images implied in their fifth-century context. (...)
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  19. Visual culture: the reader.Jessica Evans & Stuart Hall (eds.) - 1999 - Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications in association with the Open University.
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  20. Visual cultures of orientalism and empire : the Abu Ghraib images.Joseph Pugliese - 2008 - In Nicole Anderson & Katrina Schlunke (eds.), Cultural Theory in Everyday Practice. Oxford University Press.
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  21.  74
    The matrix of visual culture: working with Deleuze in film theory.Patricia Pisters - 2003 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    This book explores Gilles Deleuze's contribution to film theory. According to Deleuze, we have come to live in a universe that could be described as metacinematic. His conception of images implies a new kind of camera consciousness, one that determines our perceptions and sense of selves: aspects of our subjectivities are formed in, for instance, action-images, affection-images and time-images. We live in a matrix of visual culture that is always moving and changing. Each image is always connected to (...)
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  22.  12
    Visual Cultures in Science and Technology. A Comparative History - by Klaus Hentschel.Renzo Baldasso - 2016 - Centaurus 58 (4):322-324.
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  23. Visual Culture of the Indian Ocean: India in a polycentric world.Frederick M. Asher - 2011 - Diogenes 58 (3):67-84.
  24.  2
    Exploring Visual Culture: Definitions, Concept, Contexts.Paul Duncum - 2008 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 42 (1):121-123.
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  25.  9
    The Educated Eye Visual Culture and Pedagogy in the Life Sciences.Nancy Anderson & Michael R. Dietrich (eds.) - 2012 - Upne.
    A study of visual culture in the teaching of the life sciences.
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  26. Barthes : visual culture and homosexual sociabilities.Magali Nachtergael - 2022 - In Jeffrey R. Di Leo & Zahi Anbra Zalloua (eds.), Understanding Barthes, understanding modernism. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
  27. Barthes : visual culture and homosexual sociabilities.Magali Nachtergael - 2022 - In Jeffrey R. Di Leo & Zahi Anbra Zalloua (eds.), Understanding Barthes, understanding modernism. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
  28.  20
    Visual Culture: The Study of the Visual after the Cultural Turn.E. Winters - 2006 - British Journal of Aesthetics 46 (3):322-323.
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  29.  6
    Charles Darwin and Victorian Visual Culture.Jonathan Smith - 2009 - Cambridge University Press.
    Although The Origin of Species contained just a single visual illustration, Charles Darwin's other books, from his monograph on barnacles in the early 1850s to his volume on earthworms in 1881, were copiously illustrated by well-known artists and engravers. In this 2006 book, Jonathan Smith explains how Darwin managed to illustrate the unillustratable - his theories of natural selection - by manipulating and modifying the visual conventions of natural history, using images to support the claims made in his (...)
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  30.  3
    Victorian science & imagery: representation & knowledge in nineteenth-century visual culture.Nancy Rose Marshall (ed.) - 2021 - Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press.
    The nineteenth century was a period of science and imagery: when scientific theories and discoveries challenged longstanding boundaries between animal, plant, and human, and art and visual culture produced new notions about the place of the human in the natural world. Just as scientists relied on graphic representation to conceptualize their ideas, artists moved seamlessly between scientific debate and creative expression to support or contradict popular scientific theories, such as Darwin's theory of evolution and sexual selection, deliberately drawing (...)
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  31.  27
    Perceptographic code in visual culture.Leonid Tchertov - 2005 - Sign Systems Studies 33 (1):137-157.
    Visual culture can be considered from semiotic point of view as a system of visual codes. Several of them have natural routs. So the perceptual code is formed already on biological level mediating translation of sensory data into perceptual images of the spatial world. The means of natural perceptual code are transformed in culture, where they are involved in communication by depictions. The depiction on the flat performs the function of a “perceptogram”, which, on one hand, (...)
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  32.  7
    Virilio and Visual Culture.John Armitage & Ryan Bishop (eds.) - 2013 - Edinburgh University Press.
    The first genuine appraisal of Virilio's contribution to contemporary art, photography, film, television and more. This collection of 13 original writings, including a newly translated piece by Virilio himself, is indispensable reading for all students and researchers of contemporary visual culture. Paul Virilio is one of the leading and most challenging critics of art and technology of the present period. Re-conceptualising the most enduring philosophical conventions on everything from technology and photography to literature, anthropology, cultural, and media studies (...)
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  33.  13
    Perceptographic code in visual culture.Leonid Tchertov - 2005 - Sign Systems Studies 33 (1):137-157.
    Visual culture can be considered from semiotic point of view as a system of visual codes. Several of them have natural routs. So the perceptual code is formed already on biological level mediating translation of sensory data into perceptual images of the spatial world. The means of natural perceptual code are transformed in culture, where they are involved in communication by depictions. The depiction on the flat performs the function of a “perceptogram”, which, on one hand, (...)
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  34.  15
    Forward--The Visual Culture of the Queer in the Clinic.Sharrona Pearl - 2013 - Journal of Medical Humanities 34 (2):299-300.
    This short essay provides an overview of the Visual Studies section of the special issue “Queer in the Clinic.” Addressing the impact of visual culture on queer experiences in the clinic, the author offers thoughts on the graphic artwork of Edie Fake and Brain Cremins’s essay included in this issue. Arguing that contemporary and historical visual assessments of the LGBTQ clinical subject are vital contributors to queer bioethical debates, she explains relevant concepts such as “radical somatic (...)
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  35.  79
    On The Material Image. Affordances as a New Approach to Visual Culture Studies.Martina Sauer & Elisabeth Günther (eds.) - 2021 - New York & São Paulo: Art Style.
    This special issue on affordances bases on the thesis, that all natural and artificial things inhere affordances that appeal to our cognitive system, and thus invite us to look at them, perceive them, think about them, interpret them, and use them. The concept roots in the studies of the American psychologist James J. Gibson from the 1960s. According to him, "things" offer a certain range of possible activities depending on their form, time patterns, and material qualities, thus becoming part of (...)
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  36.  7
    Art History and Visual Culture without World.Aron Vinegar - 2015 - Zeitschrift für Ästhetik Und Allgemeine Kunstwissenschaft 60 (1):123-134.
    Aron Vinegar’s essay explores art history and visual culture’s dependence on a phenomenological conception of world, which is based on a hermeneutics of facticity, intentionality, and ontological difference. He argues that the ‘basic concept’ of world has structured the field of art history and visual culture in implicit and explicit ways, thus dictating many of its commitments and concerns. One of the primary limitations of this commitment to world, is that it has resulted in art history (...)
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  37.  13
    Mirrored Expressions: Roman visual culture and the pictorial sources of 18th century sculpture in Portugal.Sandra Costa Saldanha - 2008 - Cultura:269-291.
    Inevitável para um mais amplo conhecimento das práticas artísticas setecentistas, analisar a influência exercida pela pintura na concretização de objectos escultóricos afigura-se da maior pertinência. Áreas que se relacionam por via do papel desempenhado pelos pintores no desenho de escultura, se, no panorama internacional, o fenómeno tem despertado algum interesse, já no contexto português, apesar de aceite e até referido como corrente, tem sido praticamente ignorado.
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  38.  7
    Nancy and Visual Culture.Carrie Giunta & Adrienne Janus (eds.) - 2016 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    "In an exciting range of original responses to Nancy's work, these 12 essays reanimate the dialogue between interdisciplinary scholars and practicing artists that originally gave birth to visual culture as a field of study. A new translation of Nancy's essay, 'The Image: Mimesis and Methexis', reveals how Nancy's work informs, challenges and inspires our encounters with visual culture. Jean-Luc Nancy is one of the most original and compelling of those contemporary political and ethical philosophers who, like (...)
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  39.  11
    On knowing: art and visual culture.Paul Duncum & Ted Bracey (eds.) - 2001 - Christchurch, N.Z.: Canterbury University Press.
    Essays drawing upon a range of disciplines to present arguments that help unravel the complex nature of aesthetic understanding and its relevance to contemporary education.
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  40. What is visual culture? Jessica Evans and Stuart Hall.Jessica Evans - 1999 - In Jessica Evans & Stuart Hall (eds.), Visual Culture: The Reader. Sage Publications in Association with the Open University. pp. 1.
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  41.  5
    Through the Crosshairs: War, Visual Culture, and the Weaponized Gaze.Roger Stahl - 2018 - Rutgers University Press.
    Now that it has become so commonplace, we rarely blink an eye at camera footage framed by the crosshairs of a sniper’s gun or from the perspective of a descending smart bomb. But how did this weaponized gaze become the norm for depicting war, and how has it influenced public perceptions? _Through the Crosshairs _traces the genealogy of this weapon’s-eye view across a wide range of genres, including news reports, military public relations images, action movies, video games, and social media (...)
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  42.  54
    Global Visual Cultures: An Anthology: Book Review. [REVIEW]Savaş Arslan - 2014 - British Journal of Aesthetics 54 (1):99-102.
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  43.  8
    Oil media: Changing portraits of petroleum in visual culture between the US, Kuwait, and Switzerland.Laura Hindelang - 2021 - Centaurus 63 (4):675-694.
    This article examines three cases of mid-20th-century oil media—oil-related imagery, iconographies, and media—in visual culture: a series of popular science books entitled The Story of Oil published in the US, an oil-themed set of Kuwaiti postage stamps (1959), and an art exhibition in Zurich (1956) titled Welt des Erdöls: Junge Maler sehen eine Industrie (World of Petroleum: Young Artists See an Industry). While depicting crude oil in its natural habitat was a common photographic theme in the early 20th-century (...)
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  44.  27
    Roman visual culture - pollini from republic to empire. Rhetoric, religion, and power in the visual culture of ancient Rome. Pp. XXIV + 550, ills, maps, colour pls. Norman: University of oklahoma press, 2012. Cased, us$60. Isbn: 978-0-8061-4258-6. [REVIEW]Clare Rowan - 2014 - The Classical Review 64 (1):275-277.
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  45.  57
    Guilt and shame: essays in French literature, thought and visual culture.Jenny Chamarette & Jennifer Higgins (eds.) - 2010 - New York: Peter Lang.
    This collection of essays, on French and francophone prose, poetry, drama, visual art, cinema and thought, assesses guilt and shame in relation to structures of ...
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  46.  14
    Art, Science, and Visual Culture in Early Modern Europe.Pamela H. Smith - 2006 - Isis 97 (1):83-100.
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  47.  13
    Constructing race on the borders of Europe: ethnography, anthropology, and visual culture, 1850-1930.Marsha Morton & Barbara Larson (eds.) - 2021 - New York: Bloomsbury Visual Arts.
    Constructing Race on the Borders of Europe investigates the visual imagery (in painting, photography, prints, film, and design) of race construction primarily in Scandinavia and the empires of Austro-Hungary, Germany, and Russia at a time when the disciplines of ethnography and anthropology were expanding and publications on race were debating competing theories of biological, geographic, linguistic, and cultural determinants. These regions, while on the periphery of continental Europe, largely marginalized in the scholarship of nineteenth-century art history, and ignored by (...)
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  48.  7
    Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture.Philip Sicker - 2018 - Cambridge University Press.
    Although Joyce was losing his sight when he wrote Ulysses, Stephen's and Bloom's visual experiences are extraordinarily rich and complex. Absorbing the influences of popular visual attractions such as dioramas, stereoscopes and mutoscopes, their perceptions of Dublin are shaped by what Walter Benjamin calls 'unconscious optics'. Analyzing closely the texture of their impressions and of Joyce's prismatic narrative styles, Philip Sicker explores the phenomenon of sight from a wide-ranging set of perspectives: eighteenth-century epistemology, theories of the flaneur, Italian (...)
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  49.  36
    A General Theory of Visual Culture.J. Rapko - 2013 - British Journal of Aesthetics (4):ays066.
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  50. Affordance as a Method in Visual Cultural Studies. Based on Theory and Tools of Vitality Semiotics.Martina Sauer - 2021 - Art Style International 2 (7):11-37.
    In a historiographical and methodological comparison of Formal Aesthetics and Iconology with the method of Affordance, the latter is to be introduced as a new method in Visual Cultural Studies. In extension ofepistemologically relevant aspects relatedtostyle and history of the artefacts, communicative and furthermoreaction and decisionrelevant aspects of artefacts become important. In this respect, it is the share of artefacts in life that the new method aims to uncover. The basis for this concern is the theory and methodological tools (...)
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