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Postcinematic Vision: The Coevolution of Moving-Image Media and the Spectator PDF

249 Pages·2020·11.978 MB·English
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Postcinematic Vision CARY WOLFE, SERIES EDITOR 54 Postcinematic Vision: The Coevolution of Moving- Image Media and the Spectator Roger F. Cook 53 Bleak Joys: Aesthetics of Ecology and Impossibility Matthew Fuller and Olga Goriunova 52 Variations on Media Thinking Siegfried Zielinski 51 Aesthesis and Perceptronium: On the Entanglement of Sensation, Cognition, and Matter Alexander Wilson 50 Anthropocene Poetics: Deep Time, Sacrifice Zones, and Extinction David Farrier 49 Metaphysical Experiments: Physics and the Invention of the Universe Bjørn Ekeberg 48 Dialogues on the Human Ape Laurent Dubreuil and Sue Savage- Rumbaugh 47 Elements of a Philosophy of Technology: On the Evolutionary History of Culture Ernst Kapp 46 Biology in the Grid: Graphic Design and the Envisioning of Life Phillip Thurtle 45 Neurotechnology and the End of Finitude Michael Haworth 44 Life: A Modern Invention Davide Tarizzo 43 Bioaesthetics: Making Sense of Life in Science and the Arts Carsten Strathausen 42 Creaturely Love: How Desire Makes Us More and Less Than Human Dominic Pettman 41 Matters of Care: Speculative Ethics in More Than Human Worlds Maria Puig de la Bellacasa 40 Of Sheep, Oranges, and Yeast: A Multispecies Impression Julian Yates (continued on page 239) posthumanities 42 posthumanities 43 posthumanities 44 posthumanities 45 Postcposithunmaneitiesm 46 atic Vposithusmainitoies 4n7 posthumanities 48 The Coevolution of Moving- Image posthumanities 49 Media and the Spectator posthumanities 50 posthumanities 51 Roger F. Cook posthumanities 52 posthumanities 53 posthumanities 54 posthumanities 55 posthumanities 56 posthumanities 57 University of Minnesota Press posMthiunmnaeanpitoieliss 58 London posthumanities 59 posthumanities 60 posthumanities 61 Copyright 2020 by the Regents of the University of Minnesota All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Published by the University of Minnesota Press 111 Third Avenue South, Suite 290 Minneapolis, MN 55401- 2520 http://www.upress.umn.edu Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper The University of Minnesota is an equal- opportunity educator and employer. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Cook, Roger F., author. Title: Postcinematic vision : the coevolution of moving-image media and the spectator / Roger F. Cook. Description: Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, 2020. | Series: Posthumanities | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2019019310 (print) | ISBN 978-1-5179-0766-2 (hc) | ISBN 978-1-5179-0767-9 (pb) Subjects: LCSH: Mass media—Philosophy. | Mass media—Audiences. | Visual perception. | Digital media. | Cinematography. Classification: LCC P90 .C6815 2020 (print) | DDC 302.23—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019019310 UMP BMB Contents Introduction 1 Moving- Image Media and Embodied Spectatorship 7 Media Convergence and Remediation 14 1 Film and the Embodied Mind 27 Technogenesis: The Coevolution of the Biological and Technological 27 The Phatic Image of Cinema— Reassessed 45 “Consciousness Is an Epiphenomenon” 54 Dual Temporalities of Media and the Mind 62 Postcinematic Reflections on Spectatorship 77 2 1900: Film Transforms the Media Landscape 91 Film as Prosthetic Visual Consciousness 91 Mechanized Culture and the Moving Image 102 Remediation: The Convergence of Film and Writing 113 Film and the Tyranny of Writing: Franz Kafka 128 3 2000: Cinema and the Digital Image 155 Intermedial Constructions of Cinema’s Virtual Reality 155 Digital Mediations of Movement, Space, and Time 167 Cinema and Singular Consciousness 182 Conclusion 197 Notes 209 Bibliography 215 Index 231 This page intentionally left blank Introduction As digital technology has radically altered the media landscape and liberated the screen from the confines of an auditorium equipped with a projector and fixed seats, some media theorists have de- clared that the “cinematic century” has ended and that we have entered a “postcinematic” and even “post- televisual” age (Friedberg 2006, 242).1 In the last few years a number of film scholars have mounted a concerted effort to delineate the salient characteristics of this transition to a radically new constellation of visual media. This endeavor gained focus and steam when in his 2010 book Post- Cinematic Affect Steven Shaviro explored how the emergent forms of digital media were generating a substantially different “struc- ture of feeling” (1). More recently, an extensive online collection of both new and previously published work, Post- Cinema: Theorizing 21st- Century Film, has provided a comprehensive overview of what is at stake in this theoretical pursuit and pointed toward new ave- nues of investigation (Denson and Leyda 2016). In her groundbreaking work toward a phenomenology of cinema, Vivian Sobchack had already laid out in 1992 the basic contours of what distinguishes cinematic spectatorship in the electronic age: Postcinematic, incorporating cinema into its own techno- logic, our electronic culture has disenfranchised the human body and constructed a new sense of existential “presence.” Television, video tape recorders/players, videogames, and personal computers all form an encompassing electronic system whose various forms “interface” to constitute an alternative and virtual world that uniquely incorporates the spectator/user in a spatially decentered, weakly tem- poralized, and quasi- disembodied state. (300) 99 11 00 2 Introduction This passage from the conclusion of Address of the Eye was written just as digital imaging was beginning to alter cinema profoundly. Anticipating some of the key changes in the media environment over the next two decades, Sobchack cites those aspects of film viewing that would be affected most strongly: the involvement of all the senses in conjunction with the primary role of vision and hearing; spatial and temporal orientation; and the new sense of presence that the postcinematic image would generate. While I agree with her characterization of the new spectating position as “spatially decentered, weakly temporalized,” her suggestion that it is “quasi- disembodied” or that “our electronic culture has disenfranchised the human body” broaches questions about the way moving- image media have affected human perception since cinema became a global cultural dominant. In this study, I address the convergence of cinema and digital media with respect to the role film has played in the coevolution of the human and technol- ogy over the last hundred years. Challenging the notion that our engagement with visual media is ever actually disembodied, my account of this process contributes to our understanding of how our increasingly mediated relation to today’s digitized cultural en- vironment is altering lived experience. For some, the term postcinema seems to suggest that the film image will not survive the development and success of diverse forms of new media. Once restricted to the movie or television screen, moving images are now viewed on all manner of mobile devices and in almost every possible location. As these changes continue to take effect and new forms of media are invented at a rapid pace, there is little consensus about how this will affect cinema or whether it will succumb to the onslaught of new visual media. This popular cultural medium has, however, overcome comparable challenges in the past. Media technologies that enable new forms of entertainment either in the home (as had occurred with TV) or in public venues (such as IMAX theaters or video and VR installations) have always posed a threat to the movie indus- try (Young, xii). But cinema has proven resilient, both when TV became the dominant visual medium in the second half of the twentieth century and now as mobile moving- image devices have become commonplace. A quick assessment of the current state of Introduction 3 cinema finds a robust medium that exhibits at least on the surface more continuity than mutation. Moviegoers still flock to theaters to be entertained by films of roughly the same length and narra- tive composition as the conventional feature film that took shape in the first two decades of the previous century. Faced with the strong disruptive potential of digital technology, the Hollywood film industry has responded in the same manner it has to all de- velopments in film technology since the 1910s, assimilating digital imaging to its standard practices much as it had previously adopted innovations like sound, color, and the mobile camera. Economic, cultural, and social forces have ensured that advances in moving- image technology are deployed to bolster feature- film exhibition and reinforce the existing mode of spectatorship. While those who fear that cinema’s days are numbered seek re- assurance from its continuing popularity, theorists of postcinema contend that the ubiquity of digital devices has already ushered in a new media regime with fundamentally different conditions for spectatorship. Still, the prefix “post” does not indicate a clean break from the inherited cultural forms of moving- image viewing to one shaped entirely by either new embodied sensibilities or epistemolo- gies of perception (Denson and Leyda, 6– 7). Rather, it designates a period of transition in which both traditional film aesthetics and inherited ontologies of the image continue to play a role. As David Bordwell has argued with his assertion of an “intensified conti- nuity” (2006, 24, 50), digital imaging has the power to create even more compelling simulations that reinforce narrative continuity and representational realism. However, the ability to harness the power of digital technology in this way can also undermine the be- lief in an indexical connection between the chemical reaction that takes place on a strip of celluloid film and a profilmic reality. The digitally altered cinematic image threatens the traditional realist ontology of film. For some, this loss of indexicality has unleashed a fundamental “crisis in perception” (Brown, 70– 71) or “crisis of re- alism” (Lowenstein, 2) and stoked the fear that digital technologies “are inherently deceptive and, therefore, dangerous” (Tyron, 47). For the theorists of postcinema, this development has not spurred nostalgia for a grounding of film in material reality, but rather reveals the mediated nature of the indexical trace:

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