Publisher:
Aarhus University Press, Aarhus, Denmark
Exploring Text, Media, and Memory' investigates the link between memory and media by asking a series of questions pertinent to our time: How do individual and collective memories blend? How do traumatic experiences from past events and catastrophic...
more
Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Potsdamer Straße
Signature:
10 A 55502
Inter-library loan:
Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan
Exploring Text, Media, and Memory' investigates the link between memory and media by asking a series of questions pertinent to our time: How do individual and collective memories blend? How do traumatic experiences from past events and catastrophic projections of the future reveal the human condition in the epoch of frenetic technological reproduction of works of art? How is the human body tied to narrations ? and why? A group of international scholars tackle questions like these across art forms, media, and cultural history. In nineteen essays they argue that modern and contemporary literary texts and visual arts show how photography, film, tape recording, television, and internet are not just means of storing memory and information, but objects that we interact with every day ? challenging static visions of places and the linear notions of past, present and future
Publisher:
Aarhus University Press, Aarhus, Denmark
Exploring Text, Media, and Memory' investigates the link between memory and media by asking a series of questions pertinent to our time: How do individual and collective memories blend? How do traumatic experiences from past events and catastrophic...
more
Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
Inter-library loan:
Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan
Exploring Text, Media, and Memory' investigates the link between memory and media by asking a series of questions pertinent to our time: How do individual and collective memories blend? How do traumatic experiences from past events and catastrophic projections of the future reveal the human condition in the epoch of frenetic technological reproduction of works of art? How is the human body tied to narrations ? and why? A group of international scholars tackle questions like these across art forms, media, and cultural history. In nineteen essays they argue that modern and contemporary literary texts and visual arts show how photography, film, tape recording, television, and internet are not just means of storing memory and information, but objects that we interact with every day ? challenging static visions of places and the linear notions of past, present and future