Fr. 133.20

Visual Culture Reader

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext 'This volume is required reading for anyone interested in media studies or visual culture. It brings critical visuality studies up to the moment and introduces new directions for future work. Summing Up: Essential. Graduate students, researchers, faculty.' - A. M. Laflen, Marist College in CHOICE'This is a first rate collection covering the range and the depth of critical visual studies today. An essential guide for anyone concerned with the power of the image and the image of power.' - McKenzie Wark, Eugene Lang College, USA'This 3rd edition of Nicholas Mirzoeff’s The Visual Culture Reader is unrecognizable from the collection’s first edition published way back in the last millennium. Its content, character, and urgency are invigorating and galvanizing. If the Reader’s first edition gave shape to Visual Culture Studies as an interdisciplinary field of inquiry, this 3rd edition will, I believe, mould visual culture itself.' - Marquard Smith, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Visual Culture & Director of Institute for Modern and Contemporary Culture, University of Westminster, UK'With this volume, Mirzoeff has assembled an invaluable resource for scholars and practitioners of visual culture across disciplinary and geographic boundaries. Combining foundational texts and cutting-edge contemporary scholarship, the Third Edition of the VCR charts the emergence of critical visuality studies and brings the field into the twenty-first century.' - A. Joan Saab, University of Rochester, USA Informationen zum Autor Nicholas Mirzoeff is Professor of Media, Culture and Communication at New York University. He is author and editor of several books including Watching Babylon (1995) and An Introduction to Visual Culture, now in its second edition (2009). Klappentext In response to rapid changes in the field of visual culture, this updated third edition brings together key writings on photography, painting, sculpture, fashion, advertising, television, cinema and digital culture. Zusammenfassung In response to rapid changes in the field of visual culture, this updated third edition brings together key writings on photography, painting, sculpture, fashion, advertising, television, cinema and digital culture. Inhaltsverzeichnis PART 1 Expansions Chapter 1: "There are No Visual Media" W. J. T. Mitchell Chapter 2: "The (In)human condition: A Visual Essay" Ariella Azoulay Chapter 3: "Mapping Non-Conformity: Post-Bubble Urban Strategies" Teddy Cruz Chapter 4: "X-reality: Interview with the Virtual Cannibal" Beth Coleman Chapter 5: "On Software, or the Persistence of Visual Knowledge" Wendy Hui Kyong Chun Chapter 6: "Notes on the Photographic Image" Jacques Rancière Chapter 7: "Queer Faces: Photography and Subcultural Lives" J. Jack Halberstam Chapter 8: "Currents of Worldmaking in Contemporary Art" Terence E. Smith Chapter 9: "Sublimated with Mineral Fury: Prelim Notes on Sounding Pandemonium Asia" Sarat Maharaj Chapter 10: "The Sea and the Land: Biopower and Visuality after Katrina" Nicholas Mirzoeff PART 2: GLOBALIZATION, WAR AND VISUAL ECONOMY War and Violence Chapter 11: "The Archaeology of Violence: The King’s Head" Zainab Bahrani Chapter 12: "The Actuarial Gaze: from 9-11 to Abu Ghraib" Allen Feldman Chapter 13: "American Military Imaginaries and Iraqi cities" Derek Gregory Chapter 14: "Zeroing In: Overheard Imagery, Infrastructure Ruins, and Datalands in Afghanistan and Iraq" Lisa Parks Chapter 15: "What Greg Roberts Saw: Visuality, Intelligibility, and Sovereignty - 36,000km Over the Equator." Trevor Paglen Chapter 16: "Media and Martyrdom" Faisal Devji Chapter 17: "Live True Life or Die Trying" Naeem Mohaiemen Attention and Visualizing Economy Chapter 18: "Kino I,...

List of contents

PART 1  Expansions  Chapter 1: "There are No Visual Media" W. J. T. Mitchell  Chapter 2: "The (In)human condition: A Visual Essay" Ariella Azoulay  Chapter 3: "Mapping Non-Conformity: Post-Bubble Urban Strategies" Teddy Cruz  Chapter 4: "X-reality: Interview with the Virtual Cannibal" Beth Coleman  Chapter 5: "On Software, or the Persistence of Visual Knowledge" Wendy Hui Kyong Chun  Chapter 6: "Notes on the Photographic Image" Jacques Rancière  Chapter 7: "Queer Faces: Photography and Subcultural Lives" J. Jack Halberstam  Chapter 8: "Currents of Worldmaking in Contemporary Art" Terence E. Smith  Chapter 9: "Sublimated with Mineral Fury: Prelim Notes on Sounding Pandemonium Asia" Sarat Maharaj  Chapter 10: "The Sea and the Land: Biopower and Visuality after Katrina" Nicholas Mirzoeff  PART 2: GLOBALIZATION, WAR AND VISUAL ECONOMY War and Violence  Chapter 11: "The Archaeology of Violence: The King's Head" Zainab Bahrani  Chapter 12: "The Actuarial Gaze: from 9-11 to Abu Ghraib" Allen Feldman  Chapter 13: "American Military Imaginaries and Iraqi cities" Derek Gregory  Chapter 14: "Zeroing In: Overheard Imagery, Infrastructure Ruins, and Datalands in Afghanistan and Iraq" Lisa Parks  Chapter 15: "What Greg Roberts Saw: Visuality, Intelligibility, and Sovereignty - 36,000km Over the Equator." Trevor Paglen  Chapter 16: "Media and Martyrdom" Faisal Devji  Chapter 17: "Live True Life or Die Trying" Naeem Mohaiemen  Attention and Visualizing Economy  Chapter 18: "Kino I, Kino World: Notes on the Cinematic Mode of Production" Jonathan L. Beller  Chapter 19: "On Virtuosity" Paolo Virno  Chapter 20: "Faking Globalization" Ackbar Abbas  Chapter 21: "Creativity and the Problem of Free Labor" Andrew Ross  Chapter 22: "It's easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism" Mark Fisher  Chapter 23: "Do It Yourself Geo-Politics" Brian Holmes  PART 3: THE BODY, COLONIALITY AND VISUALITY  Bodies and Minds  Chapter 24: "Optics" René Descartes  Chapter 25: "Blindness and Visual Culture: An Eye-Witness Account" Georgina Kleege  Chapter 26: "Reduplicative Desires" Carol Mavor  Chapter 27: "The Persistence of Vision" Donna Haraway  Chapter 28: "The body and/in representation" Amelia Jones  Chapter 29: "Mami Wata: A Transoceanic Water Spirit of Global Modernity" Henry Drewal  Histories and Memories  Chapter 30: "The Mobilized and Virtual Gaze in Modernity: Flâneur/Flâneuse" Anne Friedberg  Chapter 31: "Tourism and Sacred Ground: The Space of Ground Zero" Marita Sturken  Chapter 32: "Maps, Mother/Goddesses and Martyrdom in Modern India" Sumathi Ramaswamy  Chapter 33: "Museums in Late Democracies" Dipesh Chakrabarty  Chapter 34: "The Fact of Blackness" Frantz Fanon  Chapter 35: "The Case of Blackness" Fred Moten  (Post/De/Neo)Colonial Visualities  Chapter 36: "Orientalism and the Exhibitionary Order" Timothy Mitchell  Chapter 37: "The Colonial Harem" Malek Alloula  Chapter 38: "Vodun Art, Social History and the Slave Trade" Suzanne Preston Blier  Chapter 39: "Between Cult and Culture: Bamiyan, Islamic Iconoclasm and the Museum," Finbarr Barry Flood  Chapter 40: "The Postcolonial Constellation: Contemporary Art in a State of Permanent Transition." Okwui Enwezor  Chapter 41: "Urban Warfare: Walking Through Walls" Eyal Weizman  PART 4: MEDIA AND MEDIATIONS  Chapter 42: "U.S. Operating Systems at Midcentury: The Intertwining of Race and UNIX" Tara McPherson  Chapter 43: "Rethinking the Digital Age" Faye Ginsburg  Chapter 44: "The Unworkable Interface" Alex Galloway  Chapter 45: "On the Superiority of the Analog" Brian Massumi  Chapter 46: "Race 2.0: Neoliberal Colorblindness in the Age of Participatory Media" Lisa Nakamura  Chapter 47: "Imagination, Multimodality and Embodied Interaction: A Discussion of Sound and Movement in Two Cases of Laboratory and Clinical Magnetic Resonance Imaging" Lisa Cartwright and Morana Alac

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'This volume is required reading for anyone interested in media studies or visual culture. It brings critical visuality studies up to the moment and introduces new directions for future work. Summing Up: Essential. Graduate students, researchers, faculty.' - A. M. Laflen, Marist College in CHOICE
'This is a first rate collection covering the range and the depth of critical visual studies today. An essential guide for anyone concerned with the power of the image and the image of power.' - McKenzie Wark, Eugene Lang College, USA
'This 3rd edition of Nicholas Mirzoeff's The Visual Culture Reader is unrecognizable from the collection's first edition published way back in the last millennium. Its content, character, and urgency are invigorating and galvanizing. If the Reader's first edition gave shape to Visual Culture Studies as an interdisciplinary field of inquiry, this 3rd edition will, I believe, mould visual culture itself.' - Marquard Smith, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Visual Culture & Director of Institute for Modern and Contemporary Culture, University of Westminster, UK
'With this volume, Mirzoeff has assembled an invaluable resource for scholars and practitioners of visual culture across disciplinary and geographic boundaries. Combining foundational texts and cutting-edge contemporary scholarship, the Third Edition of the VCR charts the emergence of critical visuality studies and brings the field into the twenty-first century.' - A. Joan Saab, University of Rochester, USA

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