Bibliographic Information

Audio-vision : sound on screen

Michel Chion ; edited and translated by Claudia Gorbman ; with a foreword by Walter Murch

Columbia University Press, c1994

  • pbk. : alk. paper

Other Title

Audio-vision

Uniform Title

Audio-vision

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Note

Includes bibliographical references p. ([225]-227) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Audio-Vision: Sound on Screen, French critic and composer Michel Chion reassesses audiovisual media since the revolutionary 1927 debut of recorded sound in cinema, shedding crucial light on the mutual relationship between sound and image in audiovisual perception. Chion argues that sound film qualitatively produces a new form of perception: we don't see images and hear sounds as separate channels, we audio-view a trans-sensory whole. Expanding on arguments made in his influential books The Voice in Cinema and Sound in Cinema, Chion provides lapidary insight into the functions and aesthetics of sound in film and television. He considers the effects of such evolving technologies as widescreen, multitrack, and Dolby; the influences of sound on the perception of space and time; and the impact of such contemporary forms of audio-vision as music videos, video art, and commercial television. Chion concludes with an original and useful model for the audiovisual analysis of film.

Table of Contents

The Audiovisual Contract Projections of Sound on Image The Three Listening Modes Beyond Sounds and Images Lines and Points: Horizontal and Vertical Perspectives on Audiovisual Relations The Audiovisual Scene The Real and the Rendered Phantom Audio-Vision Sound Film--Worthy of the Name Television, Video Art, Music Video Toward an Audiologovisual Poetics Introduction to Audiovisual Analysis

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