Image for Visual digital culture  : surface play and spectacle in new media genres

Visual digital culture : surface play and spectacle in new media genres

Part of the Sussex studies in culture and communication series
See all formats and editions

Digital entertainment, from video games to simulation rides, is now a central feature of popular culture.

Computer-based or digital technologies are supplanting the traditional production methods of television, film and video, provoking intense speculation about their impact on the character of art.

Examining the digital imaging techniques across a wide range of media, including film, music video, computer games, theme parks and simulation rides, Visual Digital Culture explores the relationship between evolving digital technologies and existing media and considers the effect of these new image forms on the experience of visual culture. Andrew Darley first traces the development of digital computing from the 1960s and its use in the production of visual digital entertainment.

Through case studies of films such as Toy Story , key pop videos such as Michael Jackson's Black or White , and computer games like Quake and Blade Runner , Andrew Darley asks whether digital visual forms mark a break with traditional emphases on story, representation, meaning and reading towards a focus on style, image performance and sensation.He questions the implications of digital culture for theories of spectatorship, suggesting that these new visual forms create new forms of spectatorship within mass culture.

Read More
Available
£35.09 Save 10.00%
RRP £38.99
Add Line Customisation
Usually dispatched within 2 weeks
Add to List
Product Details
Routledge
0415165555 / 9780415165556
Paperback / softback
302.234
13/04/2000
United Kingdom
English
x, 225p. : ill.
24 cm
postgraduate /undergraduate Learn More