Results for 'Digital Cinema'

988 found
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  1.  18
    Digital cinema and ecstatic technology: Frame rates, shutter speeds, and the optimization of cinematic movement.Todd Jurgess - 2017 - Angelaki 22 (4):3-17.
    This article examines the relationship between technology and aesthetics in contemporary Hollywood, using experiments with frame rates and shutter speeds to show how deep, systemic changes in cinematic technologies can alter our relation to the image’s referential functions. For eighty years, cinema’s registration of movement relied upon a standardized frame rate and shutter speed, meaning that cinema’s sense of motion was constant. With the proliferation of ever more powerful digital capture systems, however, these formerly inflexible options are (...)
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  2. Digital cinema : a false revolution.John Belton - 2010 - In Marc Furstenau (ed.), The Film Theory Reader: Debates and Arguments. Routledge.
     
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  3. Digital cinema.Berys Gaut - 2008 - In Paisley Livingston & Carl Plantinga (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Philosophy and Film. Routledge.
     
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  4.  6
    Film history as media archaeology: tracking digital cinema.Thomas Elsaesser - 2016 - Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
    Since cinema has entered the digital era, its very nature has come under renewed scrutiny. Countering the "death of cinema" debate, Film History as Media Archaeology​ presents a robust argument for cinema's current status as a new epistemological object of interest to philosophers, while also examining the presence of moving images in museum and art spaces as a challenge for art history. The study is the fruit of twenty years of research and writing at the interface (...)
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  5.  11
    From Light to Byte: Toward an Ethics of Digital Cinema.Markos Hadjioannou - 2012 - University of Minnesota Press.
    Introduction. Going digital: cinema's new age -- The reality of the index, or where does the truth lie? -- Physical presences: reality, materiality, corporeality -- Spatial coordinates: in between celluloid strips and codified pixels -- Rediscovering cinematic time -- Tracing an ethics of the movie image -- Conclusion. change: a point of constant departure.
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  6.  7
    The Neuro-Image. Alain Resnais's Digital Cinema without the Digits.Patricia Pisters - 2011 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 2 (2):23-38.
    Der Beitrag schlägt vor, das Kino des digitalen Zeitalters als einen neuen Typus des Bildes zu lesen: als Neuro-Bild. Im Rückgriff auf Gilles Deleuzes Kino-Bücher sowie sein Werk Differenz und Wiederholung argumentiert der Beitrag, dass das Neuro-Bild in der Zukunft begründet sei. Abschließend wird das Kino von Alain Resnais als Neuro-Bild und digitales Kino avant la lettre vorgestellt. This paper proposes to read cinema in the digital age as a new type of image, the neuroimage. Going back to (...)
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  7.  4
    The Neuro-Image. Alain Resnais's Digital Cinema without the Digits.Patricia Pisters - 2011 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 2 (2):24-39.
    This paper proposes to read cinema in the digital age as a new type of image, the neuroimage. Going back to Gilles Deleuze's cinema books and it is argued that the neuro-image is based in the future. The cinema of Alain Resnais is analyzed as a neuro-image and digital cinema.
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  8.  7
    Cinema in the digital age.Nicholas Rombes - 2017 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    This updated edition of Cinema in the Digital Age takes a fresh look at the state of digital cinema. It pays special attention to the ways in which nostalgia for the look and feel of analogue disrupts the aesthetics of the digital image and examines how recent films have disguised and erased their digital foundations.
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  9.  27
    Digital hermeneutics for the new age of cinema.Stacey O. Irwin - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2207-2215.
    Philosophical and technoculture studies surrounding the existential understanding of the human–technology–world experience have seen a slow but steady increase that makes a turn to material hermeneutics in the second decade of the twenty-first century (Ihde in Postphenomenology: essays in the postmodern context. Northwestern University Press, Evanston, 1993; Capurro in AI Soc 25(1):35–42, 2010; Romele in Digital hermeneutics: philosophical investigations in new media and technologies. Routledge, Abingdon, 2020; among others). This renewed focus makes sense because human–technology–world experiences need to be (...)
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  10.  21
    Non-Cinema: Digital, Ethics, Multitude.William Brown - 2016 - Film-Philosophy 20 (1):104-130.
    In this article I propose the concept of ‘non-cinema’. The term points to that which is excluded from cinema, and accordingly I seek to explore the various reasons for these exclusions, in particular the political/ideological ones, together with how these exclusions are manifested on an aesthetic level. Instead of André Bazin's founding question regarding what is cinema, therefore, this essay asks what cinema is not – and why. This question is of redoubled importance in an age (...)
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  11.  7
    Philosophy-screens: from cinema to the digital revolution.Mauro Carbone - 2019 - Albany: State University of New York Press. Edited by Marta Nijhuis.
    In The Flesh of Images, Mauro Carbone analyzed Merleau-Ponty's interest in film as it relates to his aesthetic theory. Philosophy-Screens broadens the work undertaken in this earlier book, looking at the ideas of other twentieth-century thinkers concerning the relationship between philosophy and film, and also extending that analysis to address the wider proliferation of screens in the twenty-first century. In the first part of the book, Carbone examines the ways that Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, Lyotard, and Deleuze grappled with the philosophical significance (...)
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  12.  26
    Digital Technology, Indexicality, and Cinema.David Davies - 2011 - Rivista di Estetica 46:45-60.
    My principal concern in this paper is to determine how fundamental are the implications, for the moving image as a medium for works of art, of the loss of indexicality consequent upon the move from a photochemical medium to a computational medium. I begin by examining the bearing of indexicality on the status of still images as photographs, or as photographic art. I then consider whether, where indexicality is lost through the use of digital technology, this has the same (...)
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  13.  39
    Vertical Cinema: New Digital Possibilities.Miriam Ross & Maddy Glen - 2014 - Rhizomes 26 (1).
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  14. Digital Platforms and Feminist Film Discourse: Women’s Cinema 2.0.[author unknown] - 2016
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  15.  19
    Layered Encounters: Mainstream Cinema and the Disaggregate Digital Composite.Lisa Purse - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (2):148-167.
    The digital surface in cinema has, throughout its relatively brief history, been subject to a familiar “iconophobic” tendency, documented by Rosalind Galt, to denigrate surface decoration as “empty spectacle”. In early scholarship on computer generated images in cinema, the digital surface's alleged seamlessness and “new depthlessness” frequently became an overdetermined nexus of loss: of material presence, of an indexical relation to the world and lived experience, and of the continuation of older traditions of narrative cinema. (...)
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  16.  5
    Dreaming of Cinema: Spectatorship, Surrealism, and the Age of Digital Media.Adam Lowenstein - 2014 - Cambridge University Press.
    Video games, YouTube channels, Blu-ray discs, and other forms of "new" media have made theatrical cinema seem "old." A sense of "cinema lost" has accompanied the ascent of digital media, and many worry film's capacity to record the real is fundamentally changing. Yet the Surrealist movement never treated cinema as a realist medium and understood our perceptions of the real itself to be a mirage. Returning to their interpretation of film's aesthetics and function, this book reads (...)
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  17.  64
    Why Bother with Cinema?, on Paolo Cherchi-Usai The Death of Cinema: History, Cultural Memory and the Digital Dark Age.David Sorfa - 2003 - Film-Philosophy 7 (1).
    Review of Paolo Cherchi-Usai _The Death of Cinema: History, Cultural Memory and the Digital Dark Age_ Preface by Martin Scorsese London: British Film Institute, 2001 ISBN 0851708374 (pb) 0851708382 (hb) 134 pp.
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  18.  22
    Analogue Film, Digital Discourse, on Sean Cubitt's The Cinema Effect.Richard Misek - 2005 - Film-Philosophy 9 (3).
    Sean Cubitt _The Cinema Effect_ Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2004 ISBN 0-262-03312-7 456 pp.
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  19.  17
    The death of cinema: history, cultural memory, and the digital dark age.Paolo Cherchi Usai - 2001 - London: BFI.
    It is estimated that about one and a half billion hours of moving images were produced in 1999, twice as many as a decade before. If that rate of growth continues, one hundred billion hours of moving images will be made in the year 2025. In 1895 there were just above forty minutes of moving images to be seen, and most of them are now preserved. Today, for every film made, thousands of them disappear forever without leaving a trace. Meanwhile, (...)
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  20.  2
    Deep mediations: thinking space in cinema and digital cultures.Karen Redrobe & Jeff Scheible (eds.) - 2021 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
    The preoccupation with "depth" and its relevance to cinema and media studies.
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  21.  23
    Beyond Abstract Film, on Malcolm Le Grice Experimental Cinema in the Digital Age.Edward S. Small - 2003 - Film-Philosophy 7 (7).
    Malcolm Le Grice _Experimental Cinema in the Digital Age_ London: British Film Institute, 2001 ISBN 0-85170-872-0 (pb) 0-85170-873-0 (hb) 330 pp.
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  22.  9
    Cinema-politics-philosophy.Nico Baumbach - 2019 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Film theory and its emphasis on political and ideological readings of films dominated much of cinema studies in the '70s and '80s. Since then, in response to what some view as the shortcomings of theoretical approaches, a variety of other methods have emerged or reemerged. In many ways, as Nico Baumbach argues, "Anti-Grand Theory" has won the day but its victory is, in part, based on misreadings or simplifications of '70s film theory. In particular, Baumbach views contemporary critical approaches (...)
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  23.  32
    Deleuze and Cinema in the Digital[REVIEW]Justin Litaker - 2010 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 5 (12):58-59.
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  24.  3
    Book review: Digital Platforms and Feminist Film Discourse: Women’s Cinema 2.0. [REVIEW]Ylenia Olibet - 2018 - European Journal of Women's Studies 25 (1):120-122.
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  25.  21
    Deleuze and Cinema in the Digital[REVIEW]Rockwell F. Clancy - 2012 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 7 (18):79-81.
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  26.  5
    Cinema beyond territory: inflight entertainment and atmospheres of globalisation.Stephen Groening - 2014 - Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Global airspace, global cinemaspace -- Aerial perceptions: the visuality of the airplane -- Airborne cinema: the emergence of inflight entertainment -- Executive flight: attention, gender and the seatback screen -- Networked transport: neoliberalism and digital entertainments -- Disastrous speed: thrill rides, screens and fear of flying -- Live in air: aerial circuits of television -- Conclusion: cinema as infrastructure.
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  27.  7
    Cinema and ontology.Maurizio Ferraris - 2019 - [Milano]: Mimesis. Edited by Enrico Terrone.
    Cinema and the automatic sweetheart. The work of art as an automatic sweetheart. Automatic sweethearts without names: the place of films in the world of art -- Cinema and new realism. Realism and trasparency in film. What is new in realism? Cinema, philosophy and the rediscovery of reality -- Cinema and documediality. The movie theatre of Babel. Toward a new ontology of film. The digital secret of the moving image -- Cinema and the ontology (...)
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  28.  5
    Shard cinema.Evan Calder Williams - 2017 - London: Repeater Books, an imprint of Watkins Media.
    Shard cinema tells an expansive story of how moving images have changed in the last three decades, and how they have changed us along with them, rewiring the ways we watch, fight, and navigate an unsteady world. In a set of interrelated essays that range from the writings of early factory workers to the distributed sight of contemporary surveillance, Williams argues for deep links between the images we see and the hidden labors frozen into them, exploring how even the (...)
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  29.  11
    Mauro Carbone, Philosophy-Screens: From Cinema to the Digital Revolution.Rajiv Kaushik - 2022 - Philosophy Today 66 (3):663-668.
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  30.  10
    Review of Mauro Carbone, Philosophy-Screens: From Cinema to the Digital Revolution. [REVIEW]Keith Whitmoyer - 2020 - Chiasmi International 22:449-457.
    In this text, my aim is to provide a reading of Mauro Carbone’s Philosophy Screens: From Cinema to the Digital Revolution in the context of his other writings. My claim is that in this most recent work, Carbone makes a decisive step from being an original interpreter of the work of Merleau-Ponty and Proust to making an original contribution to what I describe, following Merleau-Ponty and Carbone, the history of “a-philosophy”: an historical attempt to reverse the “official philosophy” (...)
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  31.  55
    Voiding Cinema: Subjectivity Beside Itself, or Unbecoming Cinema in Enter the Void.William Brown & David H. Fleming - 2015 - Film-Philosophy 19 (1):124-145.
    This essay examines Gaspar Noë's film, Enter the Void, in light of the work of both Gilles Deleuze and Alain Badiou. Arguing that the film shows to viewers the 'void' that separates subjects from objects, the essay also considers Noë's film in the light of drug literature and the altered states induced by cinema and describe by Anna Powell. Finally, the essay proposes that Enter the Void is a work of 'unbecoming' cinema, which in turn points to expansion (...)
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  32.  6
    Supercinema: film-philosophy for the digital age.William Brown - 2013 - New York: Berghahn.
    Introduction -- Chapter 1: Digital cinema's conquest of space -- Chapter 2: The nonanthropocentric character of digital cinema -- Chapter 3: From temporalities to time in digital cinema -- Chapter 4: The film-spectator-world assemblage -- Chapter 5: Concluding with love.
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  33.  5
    The “material function” in cinema: Resolving the paradox of the glitch.Michael Betancourt - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (236-237):251-273.
    Glitches pose expressive challenges for digital motion pictures. These problematics reveal a “material function” that determines their identification and prescribes their semantics on-screen. These issues of materiality are familiar from the ideological critiques of avant-garde film in the 1970s, but have not been explored in relation to the semiotics of digital cinema. Developing an understanding of these problematics shows the complex problematics of using glitches for critical and expressive purposes in motion pictures.
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  34. Digital Fabrication and Its Meaning for Film.Matthew Crippen - 2019 - In Joaquim Braga (ed.), Conceiving Virtuality: From Art to Technology. Cham: Springer.
    Bazin, Cavell and other prominent theorists have asserted that movies are essentially photographic, with more recent scholars such as Carroll and Gaut protesting. Today CGI stands as a further counter, in addition to past objections such as editing, animation and blue screen. Also central in debates is whether photog- raphy is transparent, that is, whether it allows us to see things in other times and places. I maintain photography is transparent, notwithstanding objections citing dig- ital manipulation. However, taking a cue (...)
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  35.  9
    Karen Redrobe and Jeff Scheible, eds. Deep Mediations: Thinking Space in Cinema and Digital Culture. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2021. 416 pp. [REVIEW]Cassandra Xin Guan - 2023 - Critical Inquiry 49 (2):298-300.
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  36.  6
    Mauro Carbone, "Philosophy-Screens: From Cinema to the Digital Revolution." Trans. Marta Nijhuis. [REVIEW]Shawn Loht - 2020 - Philosophy in Review 40 (4):138-140.
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  37. Digital Fabrication and Its Meanings for Photography and Film.Matthew Crippen - 2019 - In Joaquim Braga (ed.), Conceiving Virtuality: From Art to Technology. Cham: Springer. pp. 119-131.
    Bazin, Cavell and other prominent theorists have asserted that movies are essentially photographic, with more recent scholars such as Carroll and Gaut protesting. Today CGI stands as a further counter, in addition to past objections such as editing, animation and blue screen. Also central in debates is whether photography is transparent, that is, whether it allows us to see things in other times and places. I maintain photography is transparent, notwithstanding objections citing digital manipulation. However, taking a cue from (...)
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  38.  17
    The Digital Secret of the Moving Image.Enrico Terrone - 2014 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 51 (1):21-41.
    This article addresses the definition of cinema by focusing on the related ontological question of which basic category circumscribes cinematic works. According to Noël Carroll, the definition of cinema consists both of ontological conditions that treat the moving image as a type and of other conditions that treat it as a display. But following Carroll’s ontological conditions, the digital encoding of a moving image enigmatically ends up being both a type and a token. Solving such a puzzle (...)
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  39.  14
    Film lessons: early cinema for historians of science.Jesse Olszynko-Gryn - 2016 - British Journal for the History of Science 49 (2):279-286.
    Despite much excellent work over the years, the vast history of scientific filmmaking is still largely unknown. Historians of science have long been concerned with visual culture, communication and the public sphere on the one hand, and with expertise, knowledge production and experimental practice on the other. Scientists, we know, drew pictures, took photographs and made three-dimensional models. Rather like models, films could not be printed in journals until the digital era, and this limited their usefulness as evidence. But (...)
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  40.  6
    Film Manifestoes and Global Cinema Cultures: A Critical Anthology.Scott MacKenzie - 2014 - University of California Press.
    Film Manifestos and Global Cinema Cultures is the first book to collect manifestoes from the global history of cinema, providing the first historical and theoretical account of the role played by film manifestos in filmmaking and film culture. Focussing equally on political and aesthetic manifestoes, Scott MacKenzie uncovers a neglected, yet nevertheless central history of the cinema, exploring a series of documents that postulate ways in which to re-imagine the cinema and, in the process, re-imagine the (...)
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  41.  5
    From Philosophy-Cinema to Philosophy-Screens: Reflections on the Thought of Mauro Carbone.Galen A. Johnson - 2020 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 52 (3):251-257.
    Mauro Carbone’s most recent book, Philosophy-Screens: From Cinema to the Digital Revolution advances the work and thought of his Flesh of Images: Merleau-Ponty Between Painting a...
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  42.  10
    Change Mummified: Cinema, Historicity, Theory.Philip Rosen - 2001 - U of Minnesota Press.
    Exploring the modern category of history in relation to film theory, film textuality, and film history, Change Mummified makes a persuasive argument for the centrality of historicity to film as well as the special importance of film in historical culture. What do we make of the concern for recovering the past that is consistently manifested in so many influential modes of cinema, from Hollywood to documentary and postcolonial film? How is film related to the many modern practices that define (...)
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  43.  20
    Media Histories and Digital Futures.Nina Zimnik - 2000 - Film-Philosophy 4 (1).
    _Cinema Futures: Cain, Abel or Cable? The Screen Arts in the Digital Age_ Edited by Thomas Elsaesser and Kay Hoffmann Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 1998. ISBN: 90 5356 282 6 Hb; 90 5356 312 1 Pb 312 pp.
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  44.  17
    What the digital world leaves behind: reiterated analogue traces in Mexican media art.David M. J. Wood - 2021 - AI and Society:1-10.
    How might experimental media art help theorise what falls by the wayside in the digital public sphere? Working in the years immediately following the launch of YouTube in 2005, some media artists centred their creative praxis towards the end of that decade upon rescuing, revalorising, and placing back into digital circulation audiovisual media formats and technologies that appeared aged or obsolete. Although there may be a degree of nostalgia behind such practices, these artworks articulate a cogent critique of (...)
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  45.  5
    Derrida and Barthes: Speculative Intrigues in Cinema, Photography, and Phenomenology.Louise Burchill - 2014 - In Zeynep Direk & Leonard Lawlor (eds.), A Companion to Derrida. Oxford, UK: Wiley. pp. 321–344.
    Cinema is, for Jacques Derrida, at once the “medium,” the “apparatus,” and the “experience” that proffers a historically unprecedented instantiation of the logic of spectrality. Of cinema, Derrida would almost exclusively have spoken, his remarks dispersed in a smattering of (nonetheless significant) interviews or, indeed, films, as though the written word was to withdraw into a rare resistance when it came to matters cinemato‐graphic. As Derrida's reference to two types of writing machine, indicates contemporary “teletechnologies” consisting of machines (...)
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  46.  29
    The neuro-image: a Deleuzian film-philosophy of digital screen culture.Patricia Pisters - 2012 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    Introduction : schizoanalysis, digital screens and new brain circuits -- Schizoid minds, delirium cinema and powers of machines of the invisible -- Illusionary perception and powers of the false -- Surveillance screens and powers of affect -- Signs of time : meta/physics of the brain-screen -- Degrees of belief : epistemology of probabilities -- Powers of creation : aesthetics of material-force -- The open archive : cinema as world-memory -- Divine in(ter)vention : micropolitics and resistance -- Logistics (...)
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  47.  4
    Immagine digitale e persistenza del cinema.Daniela Angelucci - 2011 - Rivista di Estetica 46:5-16.
    The essay analyzes the transformations suffered from the cinema with the advent of digital technology and the theories that hypothesize the disappearance of film. The author affirms that cinema resists as model for new media and as experience of the spectator, despite these transformations. Finally, the essay suggests to abandon the ontological question for a phenomenological description. This description allows to identify some similarity between digital cinema and painting.
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  48.  8
    Immagine digitale e persistenza del cinema.Daniela Angelucci - 2011 - Rivista di Estetica 46:5-16.
    The essay analyzes the transformations suffered from the cinema with the advent of digital technology and the theories that hypothesize the disappearance of film. The author affirms that cinema resists as model for new media and as experience of the spectator, despite these transformations. Finally, the essay suggests to abandon the ontological question for a phenomenological description. This description allows to identify some similarity between digital cinema and painting.
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  49.  2
    What the digital world leaves behind: reiterated analogue traces in Mexican media art.David M. J. Wood - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2427-2436.
    How might experimental media art help theorise what falls by the wayside in the digital public sphere? Working in the years immediately following the launch of YouTube in 2005, some media artists centred their creative praxis towards the end of that decade upon rescuing, revalorising, and placing back into digital circulation audiovisual media formats and technologies that appeared aged or obsolete. Although there may be a degree of nostalgia behind such practices, these artworks articulate a cogent critique of (...)
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  50.  4
    #NousSommes: Collectivity and the Digital in French Thought & Culture.Cillian Ó Fathaigh, Susie Cronin & Sofia Ropek Hewson (eds.) - 2019 - Oxford, UK: Peter Lang.
    The relation between the digital and the collective has become an urgent contemporary question. These collected essays explore the implications of this relation, around the theme of #NousSommes. This hashtag marks the point where the «personal» modalities of social media have become embroiled in collective expressions of unity, solidarity and resistance. As this volume demonstrates, the impact of this cannot be isolated to the internet, but affect philosophy, literature, cinema, politics and the public space itself. The contributors approach (...)
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