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Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments

Studio Television Production and Directing - Concepts, Equipment, and Procedures (Paperback, 3rd edition): Andrew Hicks... Studio Television Production and Directing - Concepts, Equipment, and Procedures (Paperback, 3rd edition)
Andrew Hicks Utterback
R1,205 Discovery Miles 12 050 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

This updated third edition of Studio Television Production and Directing introduces readers to the basic fundamentals of studio and control room production. Accessible and focused, readers of this updated third edition will gain fluency in essential studio terms and technology and acquire the necessary skills to make it in the industry. This book is your back-to-the-basics guide to common technology-including principles of directing, assistant directing, technical directing, audio ops, the basics of studio lighting, an introduction to set design, camera ops, floor directing, story types (VO, VO/SOT, PKG), basic engineering, and more. Whether an established professional or a student, this book provides readers with the technical expertise to successfully coordinate live or taped studio television today. In this new edition, author Andrew Hicks Utterback offers an expanded glossary and new material on visualization walls, alternative camera mounts, basic engineering, and news narrative diagramming.

Studio Television Production and Directing - Concepts, Equipment, and Procedures (Hardcover, 3rd edition): Andrew Hicks... Studio Television Production and Directing - Concepts, Equipment, and Procedures (Hardcover, 3rd edition)
Andrew Hicks Utterback
R4,123 Discovery Miles 41 230 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Introduces fundamentals of studio and control room production for readers to gain fluency and acquire necessary skills to make it in the industry. Draws on the author’s previous filmmaking experience and long-standing academic career, resulting in an accessible and focused book for professionals and students. Updates to the previous edition includes an expanded glossary and coverage of latest technologies and workflows for a comprehensive text.

Posthumanism in the Novels of Kurt Vonnegut - Matter That Complains So (Hardcover): Andrew Hicks Posthumanism in the Novels of Kurt Vonnegut - Matter That Complains So (Hardcover)
Andrew Hicks
R4,134 Discovery Miles 41 340 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Posthumanism in the Novels of Kurt Vonnegut: Matter That Complains So re-examines the prevailing critical consensus that Kurt Vonnegut was a humanist writer. While more difficult elements of his work have often been the subject of scholarly attention, the tendency amongst critics writing on Vonnegut is to disavow them, or to subsume them within a liberal humanist framework. When Vonnegut's work is read from a posthumanist perspective, however, the productive paradoxes of his work are more fully realised. Drawing on New Materialist, Eco-Critical and Systems Theory methodologies, this book highlights posthumanist themes in six of Vonnegut's most famous novels, and emphasises the ways in which Vonnegut troubles human/non-human, natural/artificial, and material/discursive hierarchical binaries

Journal of the Andrew Hicks (Bark), Glas Lyn (Bark), Robert Morrison (Bark), Venezuela (Bark) and William Campbell (Ship);... Journal of the Andrew Hicks (Bark), Glas Lyn (Bark), Robert Morrison (Bark), Venezuela (Bark) and William Campbell (Ship); Mastered by Edward E. Hicks and Andrew J. Mosher; and Kept by Joseph T. Sampson; on Whaling Voyages Between 1876 and 1885. (Paperback)
Andrew Hicks (Bark), Glas Lyn (Bark), Robert Morrison (Bark)
R704 Discovery Miles 7 040 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Composing the World - Harmony in the Medieval Platonic Cosmos (Hardcover): Andrew Hicks Composing the World - Harmony in the Medieval Platonic Cosmos (Hardcover)
Andrew Hicks
R2,122 Discovery Miles 21 220 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

We can hear the universe! This was the triumphant proclamation at a February 2016 press conference announcing that the Laser Interferometer Gravity Observatory (LIGO) had detected a "transient gravitational-wave signal." What LIGO heard in the morning hours of September 14, 2015 was the vibration of cosmic forces unleashed with mind-boggling power across a cosmic medium of equally mind-boggling expansiveness: the transient ripple of two black holes colliding more than a billion years ago. The confirmation of gravitational waves sent tremors through the scientific community, but the public imagination was more captivated by the sonic translation of the cosmic signal, a sound detectable only through an act of carefully attuned listening. As astrophysicist Szabolcs Marka remarked, "Until this moment, we had our eyes on the sky and we couldn't hear the music. The skies will never be the same." Taking in hand this current "discovery" that we can listen to the cosmos, Andrew Hicks argues that sound-and the harmonious coordination of sounds, sources, and listeners-has always been an integral part of the history of studying the cosmos. Composing the World charts one constellation of musical metaphors, analogies, and expressive modalities embedded within a late-ancient and medieval cosmological discourse: that of a cosmos animated and choreographed according to a specifically musical aesthetic. The specific historical terrain of Hicks' discussion centers upon the world of twelfth-century philosophy, and from there he offers a new intellectual history of the role of harmony in medieval cosmological discourse, a discourse which itself focused on the reception and development of Platonism. Hicks illuminates how a cosmological aesthetics based on the "music of the spheres" both governed the moral, physical, and psychic equilibrium of the human, and assured the coherence of the universe as a whole. With a rare convergence of musicological, philosophical, and philological rigor, Hicks presents a narrative tour through medieval cosmology with reflections on important philosophical movements along the way, raising connections to Cartesian dualism, Uexkull's theoretical biology, and Deleuze and Guattari's musically inspired language of milieus and (de)territorialization. Hicks ultimately suggests that the models of musical cosmology popular in late antiquity and the twelfth century are relevant to our modern philosophical and scientific undertakings. Impeccably researched and beautifully written, Composing the World will resonate with a variety of readers, and it encourages us to rethink the role of music and sound within our greater understanding of the universe.

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