A technological revolution has changed the way we see things.
The storytelling media employed by Pixar Animation Studios, Samuel
Beckett, and William Shakespeare differ greatly, yet these creators
share a collective fascination with the nebulous boundary between
material objects and our imaginative selves. How do the acts of
seeing and believing remain linked? Alan Ackerman charts the
dynamic history of interactions between showing and knowing in
Seeing Things, a richly interdisciplinary study which illuminates
changing modes of perception and modern representational media.
Seeing Things demonstrates that the airy nothings of A Midsummer
Night's Dream, the Ghost in Hamlet, and soulless bodies in
Beckett's media experiments, alongside Toy Story's digitally
animated toys, all serve to illustrate the modern problem of
visualizing, as Hamlet put it, 'that within which passes show.'
Ackerman carefully analyses such ghostly appearances and
disappearances across cultural forms and contexts from the early
modern period to the present, investigating the tension between our
distrust of shadows and our abiding desire to believe in invisible
realities. Seeing Things provides a fresh and surprising cultural
history through theatrical, verbal, pictorial, and cinematic
representations.
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