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  1. Voicetracks
    attuning to voice in media and the arts
    Erschienen: [2017]; ©2017
    Verlag:  The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts

    Moved by the Aboriginal understandings of songlines or dreaming tracks, Norie Neumark's Voicetracks seeks to deepen an understanding of voice through listening to a variety of voicing/sound/voice projects from Australia, Europe and the United States.... mehr

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    Moved by the Aboriginal understandings of songlines or dreaming tracks, Norie Neumark's Voicetracks seeks to deepen an understanding of voice through listening to a variety of voicing/sound/voice projects from Australia, Europe and the United States. Not content with the often dry tone of academic writing, the author engages a "wayfaring" process that brings together theories of sound, animal, and posthumanist studies in order to change the ways we think about and act with the assemblages of living creatures, things, places, and histories around us. Neumark evokes both the literal - the actual voices within the works she examines - and the metaphorical -- in a new materialist exploration of voice encompassing human, animal, thing, and assemblages. She engages with artists working with animal sounds and voices; voices of place, placed voices in installation works; voices of technology; and "unvoicing," disturbances in the image/voice relationship and in the idea of what voice is. She writes about remixes, the Barbie Liberation Organisation, and breath in Beijing, about cat videos, speaking fences in Australia, and an artist who reads (to) the birds. Finally, she considers ethics and politics, and describes how her own work has shaped her understandings and apprehensions of voice.

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780262339834; 0262339838
    Schriftenreihe: Leonardo book series
    Schlagworte: Voice in art; New media art ; Themes, motives; DIGITAL HUMANITIES & NEW MEDIA/New Media Art; ARTS/Music & Sound Studies; CULTURAL STUDIES/Global Studies
    Umfang: 1 online resource (xiii, 215 pages), illustrations.
  2. Hanan al-cinema
    affections for the moving image
    Erschienen: [2015]; ©2015
    Verlag:  The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts ;

    An examination of experimental cinema and media art from the Arabic-speaking world that explores filmmakers' creative and philosophical inventiveness in trying times. mehr

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    An examination of experimental cinema and media art from the Arabic-speaking world that explores filmmakers' creative and philosophical inventiveness in trying times.

     

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  3. Hybrid culture
    Japanese media arts in dialogue with the West
    Erschienen: [2013]
    Verlag:  MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts

    An exploration of the tensions between East and West and digital and analog in Japanese new-media art.This book grew out of Yvonne Spielmann's 2005-2006 and 2009 visits to Japan, where she explored the technological and aesthetic origins of Japanese... mehr

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    An exploration of the tensions between East and West and digital and analog in Japanese new-media art.This book grew out of Yvonne Spielmann's 2005-2006 and 2009 visits to Japan, where she explored the technological and aesthetic origins of Japanese new-media art--which was known for pioneering interactive and virtual media applications in the 1990s. Spielmann discovered an essential hybridity in Japan's media culture: an internal hybridity, a mixture of digital-analog connections together with a non-Western development of modernity separate from but not immune to Western media aesthetics; and external hybridity, produced by the international, transcultural travel of aesthetic concepts.Spielmann describes the innovative technology context in Japan, in which developers, engineers, and artists collaborate, and traces the Japanese fondness for precision and functionality to the poetics of unobtrusiveness and detail. She examines work by artists including Masaki Fujihata, whose art is both formally and thematically hybrid; Seiko Mikami and Sota Ichikawa, who build special devices for a new sense of human-machine interaction; Toshio Iwai, who connects traditional media forms with computing; and Tatsuo Miyajima, who anchors his LED artwork in Buddhist philosophy. Spielmann views hybridity as a positive aesthetic value--perhaps the defining aesthetic of a global culture. Hybridity offers a conceptual approach for considering the ambivalent linkages of contradictory elements; its dynamic and fluid characteristics are neither conclusive nor categorical but are meant to stimulate fusions.

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780262018371; 0262018373; 9781283870139; 1283870134; 0262305836; 9780262305839
    Schriftenreihe: Leonardo
    Schlagworte: Cultural fusion and the arts ; Japan; New media art ; Japan; DIGITAL HUMANITIES & NEW MEDIA/General; DIGITAL HUMANITIES & NEW MEDIA/New Media Art; CULTURAL STUDIES/Global Studies
    Umfang: 1 online resource (viii, 267 pages), illustrations.
  4. Identity games
    globalization and the transformation of media cultures in the new Europe
    Autor*in: Imre, Anikó.
    Erschienen: 2009
    Verlag:  MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.

    This work is an examination of the unique, hybrid media practices generated by Eastern Europe's accelerated transition from late communism to late capitalism. mehr

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    This work is an examination of the unique, hybrid media practices generated by Eastern Europe's accelerated transition from late communism to late capitalism.

     

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  5. Personal, portable, pedestrian
    mobile phones in Japanese life
    Autor*in:
    Erschienen: 2005
    Verlag:  MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.

    The Japanese term for mobile phone, keitai (roughly translated as "something you carry with you"), evokes not technical capability or freedom of movement but intimacy and portability, defining a personal accessory that allows constant social... mehr

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    The Japanese term for mobile phone, keitai (roughly translated as "something you carry with you"), evokes not technical capability or freedom of movement but intimacy and portability, defining a personal accessory that allows constant social connection. Japan's enthusiastic engagement with mobile technology has become -- along with anime, manga, and sushi -- part of its trendsetting popular culture. Personal, Portable, Pedestrian, the first book-length English-language treatment of mobile communication use in Japan, covers the transformation of keitai from business tool to personal device for communication and play. The essays in this groundbreaking collection document the emergence, incorporation, and domestication of mobile communications in a wide range of social practices and institutions. The book first considers the social, cultural, and historical context of keitai development, including its beginnings in youth pager use in the early 1990s. It then discusses the virtually seamless integration of keitai use into everyday life, contrasting it to the more escapist character of Internet use on the PC. Other essays suggest that the use of mobile communication reinforces ties between close friends and family, producing "tele-cocooning" by tight-knit social groups. The book also discusses mobile phone manners and examines keitai use by copier technicians, multitasking housewives, and school children. Personal, Portable, Pedestrian describes a mobile universe in which networked relations are a pervasive and persistent fixture of everyday life.

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Beteiligt: Itō, Mizuko (MitwirkendeR); Okabe, Daisuke (MitwirkendeR); Matsuda, Misa (MitwirkendeR)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780262256414; 026225641X; 0262090392; 9780262090391; 1429413042; 9781429413046
    Schlagworte: Technology ; Social aspects ; Japan; Cell phones; Mobile phones; Japanese life; DIGITAL HUMANITIES & NEW MEDIA/General; COMPUTER SCIENCE/Human Computer Interaction; CULTURAL STUDIES/Global Studies
    Umfang: 1 online resource (viii, 357 pages), illustrations