Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the English Edition
- Orientation: At the End of the History ofCinema and Television Prolegomena to a History of Audiovision
- 1 Vanishing Point· Cinema: The Founding Years of Audiovision
- 2 Between the Wars: Between the Dispositifs
- 3 Vanishing Point Television?: On the Permeation of Familial Privateness by Televisuality
- 4 No Longer Cinema, No Longer Television: The Beginning ofa New Historical and Cultural Form of the Audiovisual Discourse
- Conclusion: Good Machines, Bad Machines For Living Heterogeneity in the Arts of Picture and Sound - Against Psychopathia Medialis
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Acknowledgements
- Index
Orientation: At the End of the History ofCinema and Television Prolegomena to a History of Audiovision
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the English Edition
- Orientation: At the End of the History ofCinema and Television Prolegomena to a History of Audiovision
- 1 Vanishing Point· Cinema: The Founding Years of Audiovision
- 2 Between the Wars: Between the Dispositifs
- 3 Vanishing Point Television?: On the Permeation of Familial Privateness by Televisuality
- 4 No Longer Cinema, No Longer Television: The Beginning ofa New Historical and Cultural Form of the Audiovisual Discourse
- Conclusion: Good Machines, Bad Machines For Living Heterogeneity in the Arts of Picture and Sound - Against Psychopathia Medialis
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Acknowledgements
- Index
Summary
The innovation of cinematography in the last decade of the nineteenth century was the expression and media vanishing point of technical, cultural, and social processes that are generally referred to as industrialisation. In the rhythmic projection of photographs arranged on perforated celluloid strips that outwitted human visual perception, in the anonymity of publicly accessible spaces vested with a highly intimate ambience, the human subjects who had been through industrialisation apparently discovered their appropriate and adequate communicative satisfaction. Reproducible dream worlds, staged for the eye and the ear, provided these subjects who had been rushed through the century of the steam engine, mechanisation, railways, and, lastly, electricity, with the material for satisfying their desires for rich sensory impressions, variety, diversions, escapism, but also for orientation.
Yet even before the first noisy and flickering celluloid projectors began to run, before cinema was actually institutionalised, theoretical work was already in progress to supersede this stage of achievement in audiovisual events - although, obviously, not at first with this express purpose in mind. Twenty years before the first cinematographic shows in Paris, Berlin, London and New York, models for ‘seeing machines'! were designed, models for a medium where the production of visual reproductions and their reception would almost coincide in time even though transmitter and receiver were spatially far apart. Telegraphy and telephony, respectively, were the models with regard to the positioning of the users of this communications teclmology. They were to be owners of their own equipment.
In the first three decades of the twentieth century, electricity aided the progress of experimentation on this tele-vision in a number of countries and was even installed in a few as a mass medium on a trial basis - notions as to its use were still undecided and located somewhere between public and private event, between cinema and radio, as expressed in Germany, for example, in early terms such as ‘Filmfunk’ [film radiol or ‘Femkino’ [telecinema] That which was a general characteristic of the teclmological change-over impacted communicative conditions in an exemplary and spectacular fashion: the transition from mechanical to electronic reproduction.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- AudiovisionsCinema and Television as Entr'Actes in History, pp. 11 - 24Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2012