Sean Cubitt: Timeshift: On Video Culture (1991)
Filed under book | Tags: · cinema, film, media culture, postmodern, psychoanalysis, tape, television, video art

“The book argues that video, rather than film or television, has the potential to become a uniquely democratic medium. Through electronic recording: video rental, off-air recordings, music videos, community, campaign or artists’ videos, viewers have found a new set of cultural relations, uses and practices. Testing current semiotic, post-modernist and psychoanalytic approaches in the laboratory of real life viewing, the book presents a perceptive analysis of present day video culture.”
Key terms: video art, postmodern, timeshifting, psychoanalysis, Wapping dispute, solipsism, metaphysics of presence, Bill Viola, Nam June Paik, metonymy, atomised, television, pop video, portapaks, Electronic Arts, Chott El-Djerid, David Byrne, Lacan, diegesis, pop music
Publisher Routledge, 1991
ISBN 0415016789, 9780415016780
206 pages
PDF (updated on 2012-7-14)
Comment (0)Gene Youngblood: Expanded Cinema (1970)
Filed under book | Tags: · art, art history, computer film, computing, cybernetics, expanded cinema, experimental film, film theory, holography, intermedia, media art, multimedia, technology, television, video, video art

“The first book to consider video as an art form, was influential in establishing the field of media arts. In the book he argues that a new, expanded cinema is required for a new consciousness. He describes various types of filmmaking utilising new technology, including film special effects, computer art, video art, multi-media environments and holography.” (Wikipedia)
Part One: The Audience and the Myth of Entertainment
Part Two: Synaesthetic Cinema: The End of Drama
Part Three: Toward Cosmic Consciousness
Part Four: Cybernetic Cinema and Computer Films
Part Five: Television as a Creative Medium
Part Six: Intermedia
Part Seven: Holographic Cinema: A New World
Key words and phrases: Jordan Belson, expanded cinema, Nam June Paik, Buckminster Fuller, Stan VanDerBeek, videotronic, Ronald Nameth, Carolee Schneemann, John McHale, Expo 67, slit-scan, John Cage, light pen, Gene Youngblood, Otto Piene, Beflix, Howard Wise, KQED, Samadhi, WGBH-TV
Introduction by R. Buckminster Fuller
Publisher E.P. Dutton, New York, 1970
SBN 0525101527
432 pages
Reviews: Paul Cowen (Leonardo, 1972), Thomas Beard (Artforum, 2020), Caroline A. Jones (Artforum, 2020).
Analysis: Adam Sindre Johnson (2010, NO).
PDF (45 MB, no OCR, via Internet Archive, added on 2016-3-2)
PDF, PDF, PDF (5 MB, OCR)
PDF chapters
Journal of Media Sociology 1(1/2) (Winter/Spring 2009)
Filed under journal | Tags: · media, politics, popular culture, sociology, television
This peer-reviewed scientific journal publishes theoretical and empirical papers and essays and book reviews that advance an understanding of the role and function (and dysfunctions) of mass media and mass communication in society or the world.
With contributions by Robin R. Means Coleman, Mark Deuze, John Hatcher, Amani Ismail, Mervat Youssef and Dan Berkowitz, Leo W. Jeffres, Kimberly Neuendorf, Cheryl Campanella Bracken and David J. Atkin, Ruben P. Konig, Hans C. Rebers, and Henk Westerik.
Edited by Michael R. Cheney
ISSN 1940-9397
130 pages
PDF (updated on 2014-8-28)
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