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To many, the technological aspects of projection often go unnoticed, only brought to attention during moments of crisis or malfunction. For example, when a movie theater projector falters, the audience suddenly looks toward the back of the theater to see a sign of mechanical failure. The
history of cinema similarly shows that the attention to projection has been most focused when the whole medium is hanging in suspension. During Hollywood's economic consolidation in the '30s, projection defined the ways that sync-sound technologies could be deployed within the medium. Most recently,
the digitization of cinema repeated this process as technology was reworked to facilitate mobility. These examples show how projection continually speaks to the rearrangement of media technology. Projection therefore needs to be examined as a pivotal element in the future of visual media's
technological transition.
In Practices of Projection: Histories and Technologies, volume editors Gabriel Menotti and Virginia Crisp address the cultural and technological significance of projection. Throughout the volume, chapters reiterate that projection cannot, and must not, be reduced to its cinematic functions alone.
Borrowing media theorist Siegfried Zielinksi's definition, Menotti and Crisp refer to projection as the "heterogeneous array of artefacts, technical systems, and particularly visual praxes of experimentation and of culture." From this, readers can understand the performative character of the moving
image and the labor of the different actors involved in the utterance of the film text. Projection is not the same everywhere, nor equal all the time. Its systems are in permanent interaction with environmental circumstances, neighboring structures, local cultures, and social economies. Thus the
idea of projection as a universal, fully autonomous operation cannot hold. Each occurrence of projection adds nuance to a wider understanding of film screening technologies.Gabriel Menotti is Assistant Professor in Moving Images Curatorial Studies at Queen's University Film and Media Department. He works as a curator in the fields of cinema and digital/new media. Menotti holds a PhD in Media and Communications from Goldsmiths, University of London, and another
from the Catholic University of Sao Paulo. He has presented projects in events such as ISEA, the Sao Paulo Art Biennial, Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin/Madrid and Transmediale, as well as written and organized a number of publications about image and technology. Menotti is the author of
Movie Circuits: Curatorial Approaches to Cinema Technology (Amsterdam University Press, 2019). In 2017-18, he was a Fulbright Visiting Fellow at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee working on the topic of digital replicas and cultural heritage. Together with Virginia Crisp, he coordinates the
Besides the Screen research network.
Virginia Crisp is Lecturer in Cultural and Creative Industries at King's College, London. She is the author of Pirates and Professionals: Film Distribution in the Digital Age (2015, Palgrave) and co-editor (with Gabriel Menotti Gonring) of Besides the Screen: Moving Images through Distribution,
Promotion and Curation (2015, Palgrave).
Catégories
Caractéristiques
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- ISBN9780190934125
- Code produit264317
- ÉditeurOXFORD UNIV.PRESS (LOGIN)
- Collectionnon-retournable
- Date de publication31 mars 2020
- FormatPapier
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