Description
From moving images on the Internet to giant IMAX displays: The number of screens in the public and private sphere has increased significantly during the last two decades. While this is often taken to indicate the "death of cinema," this volume attempts to reconsider the limits and specifics of film and the traditional movie theater. It analyzes notions of spectatorship, the relationship between cinema and the "uncinematic," the contested place of installation art in the history of experimental cinema, and the characteristics of the high definition image. Further contributions discuss the ways in which cinema interacts with other arts and media such as theater and television.
Contributors include Raymond Bellour, Victor Burgin, Vinzenz Hediger, Tom Gunning, Ute Holl, Ekkehard Knörer, Thomas Morsch, Jonathan Rosenbaum and the editors.About the Author
GERTRUD KOCH is professor for film studies at the Free University Berlin, where she is also head of the collaborative research center "Aesthetic Experience and the Dissolution of Artistic Limits." VOLKER PANTENBURG is assistant professor for Moving Images at theBauhaus University Weimar and Junior Director at the "InternationalesKolleg für Kulturtechnikforschung und Medienphilosophie."SIMON ROTHÖHLER is a postdoctoral researcher at the collaborativeresearch center "Aesthetic Experience and the Dissolution of ArtisticLimits" at the Free University of Berlin and editor of the quarterlymagazine CARGO Film/Medien/Kultur.
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