0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (1)
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (2)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 3 of 3 matches in All Departments

Reclaiming Popular Documentary (Paperback): Christie Milliken, Steve F Anderson Reclaiming Popular Documentary (Paperback)
Christie Milliken, Steve F Anderson; Contributions by Ezra Winton, Patricia Aufderheide, Zoë Druick, …
R612 Discovery Miles 6 120 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The documentary has achieved rising popularity over the past two decades thanks to streaming services like Netflix and Hulu. Despite this, documentary studies still tends to favor works that appeal primarily to specialists and scholars. Reclaiming Popular Documentary reverses this long-standing tendency by showing that documentaries can be—and are—made for mainstream or commercial audiences. Editors Christie Milliken and Steve Anderson, who consider popular documentary to be a subfield of documentary studies, embrace an expanded definition of popular to acknowledge the many evolving forms of documentary, such as branded entertainment, fictional hybrids, and works with audience participation. Together, these essays address emerging documentary forms—including web-docs, virtual reality, immersive journalism, viral media, interactive docs, and video-on-demand—and offer the critical tools viewers need to analyze contemporary documentaries and consider how they are persuaded by and represented in documentary media. By combining perspectives of scholars and makers, Reclaiming Popular Documentary brings new understandings and international perspectives to familiar texts using critical models that will engage media scholars and fans alike.

Reclaiming Popular Documentary (Hardcover): Christie Milliken, Steve F Anderson Reclaiming Popular Documentary (Hardcover)
Christie Milliken, Steve F Anderson; Contributions by Ezra Winton, Patricia Aufderheide, Zoë Druick, …
R2,090 R1,262 Discovery Miles 12 620 Save R828 (40%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

The documentary has achieved rising popularity over the past two decades thanks to streaming services like Netflix and Hulu. Despite this, documentary studies still tends to favor works that appeal primarily to specialists and scholars. Reclaiming Popular Documentary reverses this long-standing tendency by showing that documentaries can be—and are—made for mainstream or commercial audiences. Editors Christie Milliken and Steve Anderson, who consider popular documentary to be a subfield of documentary studies, embrace an expanded definition of popular to acknowledge the many evolving forms of documentary, such as branded entertainment, fictional hybrids, and works with audience participation. Together, these essays address emerging documentary forms—including web-docs, virtual reality, immersive journalism, viral media, interactive docs, and video-on-demand—and offer the critical tools viewers need to analyze contemporary documentaries and consider how they are persuaded by and represented in documentary media. By combining perspectives of scholars and makers, Reclaiming Popular Documentary brings new understandings and international perspectives to familiar texts using critical models that will engage media scholars and fans alike.

Technologies of Vision - The War Between Data and Images (Hardcover): Steve F Anderson Technologies of Vision - The War Between Data and Images (Hardcover)
Steve F Anderson
R1,112 R1,011 Discovery Miles 10 110 Save R101 (9%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

An investigation of the computational turn in visual culture, centered on the entangled politics and pleasures of data and images. If the twentieth century was tyrannized by images, then the twenty-first is ruled by data. In Technologies of Vision, Steve Anderson argues that visual culture and the methods developed to study it have much to teach us about today's digital culture; but first we must examine the historically entangled relationship between data and images. Anderson starts from the supposition that there is no great divide separating pre- and post-digital culture. Rather than creating an insular field of new and inaccessible discourse, he argues, it is more productive to imagine that studying "the digital" is coextensive with critical models-especially the politics of seeing and knowing-developed for understanding "the visual." Anderson's investigation takes on an eclectic array of examples ranging from virtual reality, culture analytics, and software art to technologies for computer vision, face recognition, and photogrammetry. Mixing media archaeology with software studies, Anderson mines the history of technology for insight into both the politics of data and the pleasures of algorithms. He proposes a taxonomy of modes that describe the functional relationship between data and images in the domains of space, surveillance and data visualization. At stake in all three are tensions between the totalizing logic of data and the unruly chaos of images.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Efekto Karbadust Insecticide Dusting…
R54 Discovery Miles 540
Motoquip Steering Wheel Cover (Grey)
R106 Discovery Miles 1 060
Top Five
Rosario Dawson, Cedric The Entertainer, … Blu-ray disc R38 Discovery Miles 380
Pineware Steam, Spray, Dry Iron (1400W)
R247 Discovery Miles 2 470
Mellerware Swiss - Plastic Floor Fan…
R371 Discovery Miles 3 710
Vegan Christmas - Over 70 Amazing Vegan…
Gaz Oakley Hardcover  (1)
R350 R49 Discovery Miles 490
Loot
Nadine Gordimer Paperback  (2)
R383 R318 Discovery Miles 3 180
Casio LW-200-7AV Watch with 10-Year…
R999 R884 Discovery Miles 8 840
Joseph Joseph Index Mini (Graphite)
R642 Discovery Miles 6 420
Hampstead
Diane Keaton, Brendan Gleeson, … DVD R63 Discovery Miles 630

 

Partners