Future cinema : the cinematic imaginary after film
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Future cinema : the cinematic imaginary after film
(Electronic culture : history, theory, practice)
MIT Press, 2003
1st MIT Press ed
Available at 15 libraries
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Note
"ZMK/Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe"
Catalog of a travelling exhibition held at the ZMK/Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Nov. 16, 2002-Mar. 30, 2003 and others
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Throughout the history of cinema, a radical avant-garde has existed on the fringes of the film industry. A great deal of research has focused on the pre- and early history of cinema, but there has been little speculation about a future cinema incorporating new electronic media. Electronic media have not only fundamentally transformed cinema but have altered its role as a witness to reality by rendering "realities" not necessarily linked to documentation, by engineering environments that incorporate audiences as participants, and by creating event-worlds that mix realities and narratives in forms not possible in traditional cinema. This hybrid cinema melds montage, traditional cinema, experimental literature, television, video, and the net. The new cinematic forms suggest that traditional cinema no longer has the capacity to represent events that are themselves complex configurations of experience, interpretation, and interaction.
This book, which accompanies an exhibition organized by the ZKM Institute for Visual Media, explores the history and significance of pre-cinema and of early experimental cinema, as well as the development of the unique theaters in which "immersion" evolved. Drawing on a broad range of scholarship, it examines the shift from monolithic Hollywood spectacles to works probing the possibilities of interactive, performative, and net-based cinemas. The post-cinematic condition, the book shows, has long roots in artistic practice and influences every channel of communication.
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