Screens and Illusionism: Alternative Teleologies of Mediation
Screens and Illusionism explores the effects of illusionism as foundational to contemporary acts of perception and aesthetics. Our point of departure is the acknowledgement that our sensory perception is fundamentally subject to mediation, through a class of objects, techniques, and technologies. We emphasize mediation to consider the loss of optical certainty, and explore illusionism within the register of the uncanny. The volume is divided into three sections: Screens as Perceptual Vehicles (Part I), Mediation and its Avatars (Part II), and Alternative Teleologies of Media (Part III). Overall, the collection resonates with contemporary discussions of screen culture, media materiality and intermediality. It explores an array of pre- and post-cinematic devices and spectacular entertainments, forging links between “old” and “new” media, and across media formats.
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Screens and Illusionism: Alternative Teleologies of Mediation
Screens and Illusionism explores the effects of illusionism as foundational to contemporary acts of perception and aesthetics. Our point of departure is the acknowledgement that our sensory perception is fundamentally subject to mediation, through a class of objects, techniques, and technologies. We emphasize mediation to consider the loss of optical certainty, and explore illusionism within the register of the uncanny. The volume is divided into three sections: Screens as Perceptual Vehicles (Part I), Mediation and its Avatars (Part II), and Alternative Teleologies of Media (Part III). Overall, the collection resonates with contemporary discussions of screen culture, media materiality and intermediality. It explores an array of pre- and post-cinematic devices and spectacular entertainments, forging links between “old” and “new” media, and across media formats.
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Screens and Illusionism: Alternative Teleologies of Mediation

Screens and Illusionism: Alternative Teleologies of Mediation

Screens and Illusionism: Alternative Teleologies of Mediation

Screens and Illusionism: Alternative Teleologies of Mediation

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Overview

Screens and Illusionism explores the effects of illusionism as foundational to contemporary acts of perception and aesthetics. Our point of departure is the acknowledgement that our sensory perception is fundamentally subject to mediation, through a class of objects, techniques, and technologies. We emphasize mediation to consider the loss of optical certainty, and explore illusionism within the register of the uncanny. The volume is divided into three sections: Screens as Perceptual Vehicles (Part I), Mediation and its Avatars (Part II), and Alternative Teleologies of Media (Part III). Overall, the collection resonates with contemporary discussions of screen culture, media materiality and intermediality. It explores an array of pre- and post-cinematic devices and spectacular entertainments, forging links between “old” and “new” media, and across media formats.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781399536530
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 12/31/2024
Series: Edinburgh Studies in Film and Intermediality
Pages: 305
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Peter J. Bloom is a Professor in the Department of Film and Media Studies at University of California, Santa Barbara. His work has been focused on film and media studies with a regional focus on West Africa, North Africa and Southeast Asia. He has published extensively on Belgian, British and French colonial media, and is currently preparing a monograph under the title, Radio-Cinema Modernity: The Catoptrics of Empire.

Dominique Jullien is Professor of Comparative Literature and French Studies at University of California, Santa Barbara. She publishes on reception and translation studies, East-West dialogue, travel narratives, media studies and world literature. Her most recent monograph is Borges, Buddhism and World Literature: A Morphology of Renunciation Tales. Her current book project explores technologies of optical mediation, illusionism and secular magic in contemporary fiction.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction
Peter J. Bloom and Dominique Jullien

Part I: Screens as perceptual vehicles

2. Does Size Matter? Screens, Illusions, and Moving Picture Dispositives
Erkki Huhtamo

3. Not Understanding Media: From Optical Toys to Artificial Intelligence
Tomáš Dvořák

4. From Eyes to Hands: Behind the Embrace of the “Screen-Free” Playscape
Meredith A. Bak

5. Wandering Eyes: A Meditation on Animated Deep Space Devices of Wonder
Colin Williamson

Part II: Mediation and its Avatars

6. Resurrections of the Dead. The Technological Uncanny of Ghost Production
Katharina Rein

7. Showing the Impossible: The Anatomy of a Cinematic Trick Image
Frank Kessler

8. The Flight of the Nightingale in the era of #BlackLivesMatter
Peter J. Bloom

9. No Strings Attached: Forms of Corruption
John Mowitt

10. Talking Furniture: Féeries for a Troubled Time in Proust, Ravel and Chomón
Dominique Jullien

Part III: Alternative Teleologies of Media

11. "Amid the moving pageant": Wordsworth’s Photographic Encounters
Claire Grandy

12. Waves from An Old Film: The Aging of Cinema and the Uncanny Earth
Herschel Farbman

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