
Still Moving
Between Cinema and Photography
Duke University Press
Will be published approx. on 17. September 2008
Book
Hardback
328 pages
978-0-8223-4131-4 (ISBN)
Description
In Still Moving noted artists, filmmakers, art historians, and film scholars explore the boundary between cinema and photography. The interconnectedness of the two media has emerged as a critical concern for scholars in the field of cinema studies responding to new media technologies, and for those in the field of art history confronting the ubiquity of film, video, and the projected image in contemporary art practice. Engaging still, moving, and ambiguous images from a wide range of geographical spaces and historical moments, the contributors to this volume address issues of indexicality, medium specificity, and hybridity as they examine how cinema and photography have developed and defined themselves through and against one another.Foregrounding the productive tension between stasis and motion, two terms inherent to cinema and to photography, the contributors trace the shifting contours of the encounter between still and moving images across the realms of narrative and avant-garde film, photography, and installation art. Still Moving suggests that art historians and film scholars must rethink their disciplinary objects and boundaries, and that the question of medium specificity is a necessarily interdisciplinary question. From a variety of perspectives, the contributors take up that challenge, offering new ways to think about what contemporary visual practice is and what it will become.
Contributors: George Baker, Rebecca Baron, Karen Beckman, Raymond Bellour, Zoe Beloff,Timothy Corrigan, Nancy Davenport, Atom Egoyan, Rita Gonzalez, Tom Gunning, Louis Kaplan,
Jean Ma, Janet Sarbanes, Juan A. SuArez
Contributors: George Baker, Rebecca Baron, Karen Beckman, Raymond Bellour, Zoe Beloff,Timothy Corrigan, Nancy Davenport, Atom Egoyan, Rita Gonzalez, Tom Gunning, Louis Kaplan,
Jean Ma, Janet Sarbanes, Juan A. SuArez
Reviews / Votes
"Still Moving engages new debate in a field central and crucial to cinema, media, and cultural studies. The collection explores the nature of photography and cinema both before and after the advent of digital media. As a result, some stunning work-on acceleration and simulation, on filming and editing in photographic and electronic media, on the fortunes of memory and oblivion, and on the dialogue and conflict of technologies-emerges from the tension of still and moving images."-Tom Conley, author of Cartographic Cinema "Still Moving maps out various interesting directions, trends, and tendencies inspired by the fact that moving-image media are losing their coherence, spinning out and recombining in interesting ways. In doing so, it opens up a number of fresh paths for examining what film and photography, as well as cinema studies and art history, will become. It will be widely read and discussed in the worlds of art and film, the classroom, the museum, and the gallery."-D. N. Rodowick, Professor of Visual and Environmental Studies and Director of Graduate Studies in Film and Visual Studies, Harvard UniversityMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
North Carolina
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
57 b&w photographs
Dimensions
Height: 231 mm
Width: 160 mm
Thickness: 30 mm
Weight
590 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8223-4131-4 (9780822341314)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
09/2008
1st Edition
De Gruyter
€208.99
Available for download
Persons
Karen Beckman is Elliot and Roslyn Jaffe Professor of Film Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. She is the author of Vanishing Women: Magic, Film, and Feminism, also published by Duke University Press.
Jean Ma is Assistant Professor in the Department of Art and Art History at Stanford University.
Jean Ma is Assistant Professor in the Department of Art and Art History at Stanford University.
Content
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction / Karen Beckman and Jean Ma 1
One. Beyond Referentiality
1. What's the Point of an Index? or, Faking Photographs / Tom Gunning 23
2. "The Forgotten Image between Two Shots": Photos, Photograms, and the Essayistic / Timothy Corrigan 41
3. Structural Film: Noise / Juan A. SuArez 62
Two. Nation, Memory, History
4. An Essay on Calendar / Atom Egoyan 93
5. Photography's Absent Times / Jean Ma 98
6. The Idea of Still / Rececca Baron, interviewed by Janet Sarbanes 119
7. Crash Aesthetics: Amores Perros and the Dream of Cinematic Mobility / Karen Beckman 134
8. Surplus Memories: From the Slide Show to the Digital Bulletin Board to Jim Mendiola's Speeder Kills / Rita Gonzalez 158
Three. Working Between Media
9. Photography's Expanded Field / George Baker 175
10. Weekend Campus / Nancy Davenport 189
11. Aleph Beat: Wallace Berman between Photography and Film / Louis Kaplan 196
12. Mental Images: The Dramatization of Psychological Disturbance / Zoe Beloff 226
13. Concerning "the Photographic" / Raymond Bellour 253
References 277
Contributors 293
Index 297
Introduction / Karen Beckman and Jean Ma 1
One. Beyond Referentiality
1. What's the Point of an Index? or, Faking Photographs / Tom Gunning 23
2. "The Forgotten Image between Two Shots": Photos, Photograms, and the Essayistic / Timothy Corrigan 41
3. Structural Film: Noise / Juan A. SuArez 62
Two. Nation, Memory, History
4. An Essay on Calendar / Atom Egoyan 93
5. Photography's Absent Times / Jean Ma 98
6. The Idea of Still / Rececca Baron, interviewed by Janet Sarbanes 119
7. Crash Aesthetics: Amores Perros and the Dream of Cinematic Mobility / Karen Beckman 134
8. Surplus Memories: From the Slide Show to the Digital Bulletin Board to Jim Mendiola's Speeder Kills / Rita Gonzalez 158
Three. Working Between Media
9. Photography's Expanded Field / George Baker 175
10. Weekend Campus / Nancy Davenport 189
11. Aleph Beat: Wallace Berman between Photography and Film / Louis Kaplan 196
12. Mental Images: The Dramatization of Psychological Disturbance / Zoe Beloff 226
13. Concerning "the Photographic" / Raymond Bellour 253
References 277
Contributors 293
Index 297