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Forensic Media : Reconstructing Accidents in Accelerated Modernity

Part of the Sign, Storage, Transmission series
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In Forensic Media, Greg Siegel considers how photographic, electronic, and digital media have been used to record and reconstruct accidents, particularly high-speed crashes and catastrophes.

Focusing in turn on the birth of the field of forensic engineering, Charles Babbage's invention of a "self-registering apparatus" for railroad trains, flight-data and cockpit voice recorders ("black boxes"), the science of automobile crash-testing, and various accident-reconstruction techniques and technologies, Siegel shows how "forensic media" work to transmute disruptive chance occurrences into reassuring narratives of causal succession.

Through historical and philosophical analyses, he demonstrates that forensic media are as much technologies of cultural imagination as they are instruments of scientific inscription, as imbued with ideological fantasies as they are compelled by institutional rationales.

By rethinking the historical links and cultural relays between accidents and forensics, Siegel sheds new light on the corresponding connections between media, technology, and modernity.

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Product Details
Duke University Press
0822357399 / 9780822357391
Hardback
363.12
05/11/2014
United States
272 pages, 57 illustrations
152 x 229 mm, 499 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Learn More