Available Formats
Postcinematic Vision: The Coevolution of Moving-Image Media and the Spectator
By (Author) Roger F. Cook
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
17th March 2020
United States
General
Non Fiction
Media studies
791.4301
Hardback
240
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 25mm
A study of how film has continually intervened in our sense of perception, with far-ranging insights into the current state of lived experience How has cinema transformed our senses, and how does it continue to do so Positing film as a stage in the long coevolution of human consciousness and visual technology, Postcinematic Vision offer a fres
"Roger F. Cooks groundbreaking book, Postcinematic Vision, is an original and intriguing contribution to the analysis of the emergence of cinematic technologies on the spectator. The analysis of changes in our perception in concert with changes in the history of film and post-filmic development is exigent for our time. Postcinematic Vision traces out a dialectical relationship between technologies and formal developments in film and changes in our experience of the body and its perceptual capacities, helping us take stock of where we stand today and what we stand against."Todd McGowan, author of Emancipation After Hegel: Achieving a Contradictory Revolution
"Interrogating the cinemas historical intermediality with rare clarity, Roger F. Cook claims that films historical transformations of perception and sensation in the early twentieth century still fundamentally shape the phenomenology of digital medianot to mention the sensoria of its users. Along the way, he engages with key critics from Marshall McLuhan and Friedrich Kittler to Anne Friedberg, Lev Manovich, and David Rodowick, challenging and revising their findings via compelling film readings and astute deployment of discourses as diverse as cybernetics and post-Romantic theories of writing. Postcinematic Vision is a compelling and singular work on living with twenty-first century media."Paul Young, Dartmouth College
Roger F. Cook is professor of German studies and director of the Film Studies Program at the University of Missouri. He has written extensively on film and media theory, New German Cinema, and contemporary German film. He coedited The Cinema of Wim Wenders: Image, Narrative, and the Postmodern Condition and is coeditor of Berlin School Glossary: An ABC of the New Wave in German Cinema.