Videographic Cinema

£28.79

Preview sample

Videographic Cinema

An Archaeology of Electronic Images and Imaginaries

Film history, theory or criticism Film: styles and genres Media studies

Author: Jonathan Rozenkrantz

Dinosaur mascot

Collection: Thinking Media

Language: English

Published by: Bloomsbury Academic

Published on: 1st October 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 232 pages

ISBN: 9781501362415


In 1957, A Face in the Crowd incorporated live video images to warn about the future of broadcast TV. In 2015, Kung Fury was infused with analogue noise to evoke the nostalgic feeling of watching an old VHS tape. Between the two films, numerous ones would incorporate video images to imagine the implications of video practices. Drawing on media archaeology, Videographic Cinema shows how such images and imaginaries have emerged, changed and remained over time according to their shifting technical, historical and institutional conditions.

Rediscovering forgotten films like Anti-Clock (1979) and reassessing ones like Lost Highway (1997), Jonathan Rozenkrantz charts neglected chapters of video history, including self-confrontation techniques in psychiatry, their complex relation with surveillance, and the invention/discovery of the “videographic psyche” by artists, therapists and filmmakers. Spanning six decades, Videographic Cinema discovers an epistemic shift from prospective imaginaries of surveillance and control conditioned on video as a medium for live transmission, to retrospective ones concerned with videotape as a recording memory. It ends by considering videographic filmmaking itself as a form of archaeology in the age of analogue obsolescence.

Show moreShow less