Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction Post-, Grand, Classical or “So-Called”: What Is, and Was, Film Theory?
- Part I WHAT WE ARE
- Part II WHAT SCREEN CULTURE IS
- Chapter Eight Apparatus Theory, Plain and Simple
- Chapter Nine Properties of Film Authorship
- Chapter Ten “Deepest Ecstasy” Meets Cinema's Social Subjects: Theorizing the Screen Star
- Chapter Eleven Rethinking Genre Memory: Hitchcock's Vertigo and Its Revision
- Chapter Twelve Digital Technologies and the End(s) of Film Theory
- Chapter Thirteen How John the Baptist Kept His Head: My Life in Film Philosophy
- Part III HOW WE UNDERSTAND SCREEN TEXTS
- Postface
- Notes on Contributors
- Filmography
- Index
Chapter Twelve - Digital Technologies and the End(s) of Film Theory
from Part II - WHAT SCREEN CULTURE IS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 September 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction Post-, Grand, Classical or “So-Called”: What Is, and Was, Film Theory?
- Part I WHAT WE ARE
- Part II WHAT SCREEN CULTURE IS
- Chapter Eight Apparatus Theory, Plain and Simple
- Chapter Nine Properties of Film Authorship
- Chapter Ten “Deepest Ecstasy” Meets Cinema's Social Subjects: Theorizing the Screen Star
- Chapter Eleven Rethinking Genre Memory: Hitchcock's Vertigo and Its Revision
- Chapter Twelve Digital Technologies and the End(s) of Film Theory
- Chapter Thirteen How John the Baptist Kept His Head: My Life in Film Philosophy
- Part III HOW WE UNDERSTAND SCREEN TEXTS
- Postface
- Notes on Contributors
- Filmography
- Index
Summary
For well over two decades, film studies has posed the question as to what the conversion to digital has meant for cinema. The answers have ranged from proclamations of the end, or in a more anthropomorphic phrasing, the ‘death’ of cinema, to assertions of the resilience of cinema in digital code. Twenty years ago, but with lingering prescience, Thomas Elsaesser summed this up in saying that cinema ‘will remain the same, and it will be utterly different’ (Elsaesser 1998, 204). The digital has brought about pervasive changes in shooting, editing, distribution and marketing as well as screening contexts. Still, 35mm film remains the reference standard for image resolution, and there is an astounding resilience of the classical mode of editing, of the star and genre systems and the cinematic projection mode. The industry of cinema persists despite its apocalyptic detractors, because, as Elsaesser recently noted, it is ‘ “business as usual,” because, as usual, it was (a) business’ (Elsaesser 2016, 184). Yet, digital technologies have radically reconfigured cinema, notably in the arena of inscription, screening and reception.
But if we instead ask exactly how digital technologies have changed film scholarship, the ‘same but different’ answer is less satisfying. Even harder to answer is the question of how the digital has impacted film theory. Some strands of cognitivist and reception theory may have remained the same, insofar as moving images engage people, and induce feelings and emotions and create meaning according to similar cues and schemata as before. But the ontologies of cinema have changed in every way. Film theory today asks not only ‘What is Cinema?’, but also ‘where’ and ‘when’ is cinema (Hagener 2008; Hediger 2012). The proliferation of screens and the near- ubiquity of moving images, with all the promises of an accrued relevance of film theory this should entail, has instead created a crisis where an entire discipline seems to have lost its compass.
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- Information
- The Anthem Handbook of Screen Theory , pp. 209 - 226Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2018