Location
Main Entry - Personal Name
Title Statement Photography, cinema, memory : the crystal image of time
Publication, Distribution, etc. (Imprint) University of Minnesota Press , Minneapolis, Minn. : cop. 2009
SAB Classification Code
Physical Description
Bibliography, etc. Note Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note Cinema and the event of photography -- Photographic memory, photographic time -- The division of time -- Cinema's photographic view -- How does a photograph work? -- Becoming-photography -- The new uses of photography.
Subject - Topical Term
ISBN 978-0-8166-4738-5 (inb.) 978-0-8166-4738-5 978-0-8166-4739-2 (hft.) 978-0-8166-4739-2
Waiting
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*007|||||||||||||||||||||||
*008110824s2009 xxua|||| |001 0|eng c
*020 $a978-0-8166-4738-5 (inb.)
*020 $a978-0-8166-4738-5
*020 $a978-0-8166-4739-2 (hft.)
*020 $a978-0-8166-4739-2
*035 $a(Ko)32554
*084 $aIna
*084 $aPna
*084 $aPnb
*084 $aInaa
*1001 $aSutton, Damian
*24510$aPhotography, cinema, memory :$bthe crystal image of time /$cDamian Sutton
*260 $aMinneapolis, Minn. :$bUniversity of Minnesota Press ,$ccop. 2009
*300 $axiii, 269 s. :$bill.
*504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
*505 $tCinema and the event of photography -- Photographic memory, photographic time -- The division of time -- Cinema's photographic view -- How does a photograph work? -- Becoming-photography -- The new uses of photography.
*650 4$aPhotography, Artistic.
*650 4$aPhotography
*650 4$aPhilosophy.
*650 4$aCinematography.
*650 4$aFotokonst
*650 4$aFotografi
*650 4$ateori, filosofi
*650 4$aFilmteknik
*650 4$aFotokonst
*650 4$aCinematography
*8520 $hFOTOGRAFI - In
*950 $aPhotography, Artistic
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Cinema and photography are both intimately associated with time--cinema with time in passing, the photograph with the lost moment. In Photography, Cinema, Memory, Damian Peter Sutton explores time in both media to present a radical new understanding of the photographic image as always coming into being. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze's concept of the crystal image to move beyond the tropes of immobility, stasis, and death, Sutton's analysis reveals the open-endedness of time expressed in the photograph, either as a potential for an abundant future or as a depth of meandering remembrance. He presents an innovative taxonomy of time in the photograph, considering particular representations of time in the work of Nan Goldin, Eugène Atget, Andy Warhol, and others. He contrasts this taxonomy with representations of time in cinema since 1895, offering fresh readings of the films of the Lumière brothers and Mitchell & Kenyon, as well as more recent works including Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind , Amélie , and A Matter of Life and Death . Throughout this work, Sutton connects and grounds cinema and photography as starting points to comprehend how we come to terms, ultimately, with time itself as pure, immanent change.