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In Media Res PDF

101 Pages·2017·11.25 MB·English
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VViirrggiinniiaa CCoommmmoonnwweeaalltthh UUnniivveerrssiittyy VVCCUU SScchhoollaarrss CCoommppaassss Theses and Dissertations Graduate School 2018 IInn MMeeddiiaa RReess Christopher Andrew Sisk Virginia Commonwealth University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd Part of the American Politics Commons, American Popular Culture Commons, Broadcast and Video Studies Commons, Communication Technology and New Media Commons, Critical and Cultural Studies Commons, Fine Arts Commons, Graphic Communications Commons, Graphic Design Commons, Interactive Arts Commons, Interdisciplinary Arts and Media Commons, Mass Communication Commons, Politics and Social Change Commons, Rule of Law Commons, Social Influence and Political Communication Commons, Social Media Commons, Sociology of Religion Commons, and the Visual Studies Commons © The Author DDoowwnnllooaaddeedd ffrroomm https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/5444 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at VCU Scholars Compass. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of VCU Scholars Compass. For more information, please contact [email protected]. in media res We are inundated by a constant feed of media that responds and adapts in real time to the impulses of our psyches and the dimensions of our devices. Beneath the surface, this stream of information is directed by hidden, automated controls and steered by political agendas. The transmission of information in has evolved into a spiral of entropy, and the boundaries between author, content, platform, and receiver have blurred. media This reductive space of responsive media is a catalyst for immense political and cultural change, causing us to question our res notions of authority, truth, and reality. A t t a c k U p d a t e - A s s A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the ai l requirements for the degree of Master of Fine Arts at an t Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts. r a m m e d c a r Drew Sisk Furman University i n Bachelor of Arts, Art and Asian Studies to I Greenville, South Carolina D F 2010 f o r c e s Virginia Commonwealth University . A Master of Fine Arts, ss a Design/Visual Communication il a Richmond, Virginia nt 2018 5 s h o t a n d m u r d e r e d R a b b i ‚ … A l o t o f p e o p l e Thesis Committee h e a r i n Nicole Killian David Shields Indrek Sirkel g f Assistant Professor Associate Professor Associate Professor ro m Graphic Design Chair, Graphic Design Head of Graphic Design G o Estonian Academy of Art d m Tallinn, Estonia ay h a v e b e e n i n s p i r e d n OJ Simpson. Bill Clinton. Bosnia. Where are the contradictions? b o y cti Wa u Princess Diana. Heaven’s Gate. Iraq. Whose voices are heard, and whose lt d ’ o s ntr are suppressed? How does the format vi I si o I am a child of the 24-hour cable news impact our perception? What are the n o f t cycle. Every morning I woke up to the consequences? As a graphic designer, h e m e faint sound of the morning news coming I participate in this system and always d i a d from our living room. With talking heads contend with these questions. efi n e in the background, my dad would fill me l o v e in on each day’s headlines and hand Ferguson. Syria. Brexit. Donald Trump. f o r . me his crinkled up copy of the local Fake News. Solar Eclipse. T h e F newspaper he had already pored over. e a t u r I’ve been a news junkie ever sense. I still wake up to the morning news, but ed 6 now it comes mediated by the blue glow 7 “Do people really not read the of my smartphone. I’m still constantly C a s e newspaper?” This was my father’s plugged in, but now I swipe through an s o f constant refrain then, tinged slightly algorithmically curated blend of hard th e C with a bit of evangelical judgement. news and politics with personal stories or p s R He considered himself a witness to and memes on my Facebook timeline e p o r t perceived ignorance, and he took to and Twitter feed. This environment is S h o r heart Thomas Jefferson’s argument one of vulnerability and detachment, t . H E that “democracy demands an educated a movement toward hyperreality. My LP T H and informed public.” work critiques this flattened media E F I N landscape, cracking its veneer and D O T H E It wasn’t until later that I could begin to exposing its absurdities. R W A N make connections and situate what I T E D F was seeing and reading within a broader UG I T I global context. Where is this information VE S Res coming from? What are the political : I’ a m di th Me motivations behind it? ank In ful s f nt or e t nt he o i C r l o v e f o Introduction 6 Responsive Politics 98 r t h e i Abstract 10 Spectacular Totality 102 nt e r e s t Breaking and Trending 12 Rapture 116 s o f o t Physis and Techne 18 Lest We Forget 128 he r s ” P The Responsive Grid 24 In Media Res 130 hi l i p p i Infinite Scroll 28 It Never Was 183 an s 2 and Always Will Be : Sources and Dispositions 38 At 8 9 Bibliography 186 Cycles and Distortions 46 D Acknowledgements 190 is Spectacle, Part I 56 ney ’ s H Spectacle, Part II 60 oll y w o o Filled Boxes, Flattened Spaces, 72 d S t u d Infinite Scroll i o s a b Reality Peripheries 76 oa r d a n a m p h i b i o u s r a i d . Y o u n g J e d i p u t s Re the a ir di f e a M it n h‚ I … t We are inundated by a constant feed of media W c r stra ote b a A g r e that responds and adapts in real time to the a t d a y c e l e impulses of our psyches and the dimensions br a t i n g f r o of our devices. Beneath the surface, this m o u r f a m i l stream of information is directed by hidden, y t o y o u r s ! automated controls and steered by political 1 1 1 agendas. The transmission of information 1 S h o o t has evolved into a spiral of entropy, and i n g a t t a c k the boundaries between author, content, a t t h e a i r p platform, and receiver have blurred. This o r t t o d a y . reductive space of responsive media is a He ’ s fi g h t i catalyst for immense political and cultural ng y o u r b a t change, causing us to question our notions tl e s s . e G R o o a db edi of authority, truth, and reality. ye M n I Breaking g fl n e ndi xed e - Tr ar nd and m ha a n g g. kin OJ Simpson’s white Ford Bronco Th ea races ahead of police down the ey r j B highway in LA as seen from a us t camera in a helicopter above. r e Marshall Applewhite’s haunt- fu s e ing eyes dart back and forth in d Trending t Heaven’s Gate videos that play o a on a constant loop after the cult’s s s i eerie, visually coordinated mass s t suicide coinciding with Comet wi t Hale-Bopp. Nancy Kerrigan, the h r Olympic ice skater, cries in an el i arena concourse after suffering ef e an attack planned by her heated f - rival, Tanya Harding. I distinctly 1 1 remember a steady stream of sensationalized news stories 1 as a child in the 1990s. These were all captivating, “made for 1 TV” moments, images that powered the 24-hour news cycle. Spiraling out and superseding these original singular events, f o r hyperbolic soundbites and looping images become the main t s . content of consumption. T h The 24-hour news cycle has given up its dominance to is an equally sensationalized stream of content customized to our Un m interests in real time and forecasting what will captivate us in an n e the future. I open my phone and scroll through my Twitter feed, d A seeing activists react to the latest statements from Donald e r i Trump right above memes mutating from completely different a l realms of my small slice of the social media universe. Scores V e h and stats from basketball and football games weave their way ic l in between. Friends, family, and complete strangers delve into e U rancorous debate on the veracity of a news story currently AV making the rounds on Facebook. Below these, acquaintances is share live streams of police brutality and natural disasters ta k i uploaded by random people on the street. Politics, culture, and n g personal narratives are compressed in space and time, medi- p l a ated by a set of standard devices. c e Breaking news. Streaming now. Trending topics. The F r i terms we use to discuss live media reveal how we consume it , S and its effect on us. If we break down the grammar, all of these at es –ing terms are in the present participle, meaning the action is in , a R n a the midst of taking place, with no clearly defined start or end. d S edi un M a t n I The g By the time we enter the feed, we are joining a space in media 3 n p. ndi res, in the middle of things, to borrow from the well-used liter- I Tre ary device. In cable broadcasts and, social media feeds, there wou and aarne u nnob rpoakuesne sst, rneoa mtim wei tbheotuwt etiemne e tvoe ntrtasc. eW bea sceke t oa arunnyn siningg flee ed, ld lo eaking oatr itghine psoaminte. Etimveer.y Ethainchg bisr eimakpionrgt annetw asn dst nooryth oinr gtr iesn idminpgo rttoapnitc ve to se r comes quickly and replaces what came before it. Time col- e B y lapses and context spirals into entropy. o u t h e r Structure e? A m e r i The feed runs on a standard grid that stretches and rearranges ca n seamlessly to fit an expanding multitude of digital devices. e e d The responsive grid of our devices is a rational structure that s a plays host to an irrational hierarchy, a space of simultaneous n A distance and proximity to each other’s real-time personal and t t o collective narratives, to disaster and violence, and ultimately r- to political upheaval. The presentation and consumption of 1 media has flattened our concept of reality, with consequences 1 to our individual psyches and collective politics. Beyond the 1 5 individual pieces of content we read or watch, the structures and mechanisms of the smartphone, social media, and the n cloud shape us profoundly. Decades before widespread use ey G of the internet, Marshall McLuhan argued that the mechanized e n e means of communication supersede the power of the contents r a l they hold, stating famously that “the medium is the message.” P u McLuhan says that we too often overlook the power of the bl i larger apparatus of media: sh e s P “For the ‘content’ of a medium is like the juicy piece of ho n meat carried by the burglar to distract the watchdog y “ T of the mind. The effect of the medium is made strong r a f and intense just because it is given another medium fi c as ‘content.’” 1 k i n g ” Posts, tweets, memes, and likes are the content, but psy- St u chological and political power lies in the structure itself, the dy omnipresent black box of the digital screen and the responsive Wi t grid holding it all together. h F l a w e d , I n c s om e p R le a te di D e a M 1. Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media: ta n The Extensions of Man. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964. 19 . I e O uctur ’Donoh r u St e w a s p r o m o t e d t o t h e c o m p a n y h e s t a r t e d . T a k e t h i s 1 1 6 7 q u i z t o fi n d m i s s i n g ‚ … M a y w e h o n o r t h e i r f a l l e n b r o t h e r s . W e d r s iv e e R o a ur di p e o M w e n r I

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Marshall Applewhite's haunt- ing eyes dart back and forth in. Heaven's HAUnteD BY. gOOgLe ADsense. 1:19 PM — 19 April 1118. In Media R es.
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