Re-/Dissolving Mimesis / Sebastian Althoff, Elisa Linseisen, Maja-Lisa Müller, Franziska Winter, Michael Taussig, Jane Bennett, Uwe Wirth

A woman is implicated in an assassination and captured on CCTV. Instead of looking for a truth behind the image - is she really guilty? - the writer and curator Shumon Basar dives deeper into the image itself. The kaleidoscopic result of this "paranoid, associative portrait" is the gateway...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
HerausgeberIn:
Year of Publication:2020
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Medien und Mimesis; 6.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Other title:Preliminary Material /
Sigle /
Preface /
Editorial: Re/Dissolving Mimesis /
LOL History /
Dying, Behind the Scenes: Picturing Impending Death /
The Making of a Screen Image /
Splitting Images: Cultural Techniques of Separation and Combination /
Soft Dissection /
Epistemological Zoomings into Post-Digital Reality, or How to Deal with Digital Images? Mimesis as a Methodological Approach /
Context and Perspective: On Challenges of (New) Media Criticism /
A CCTV Image that Dissolves like Smeared Data: Distinguishability versus Similarity /
OMG FML RN (LOL): Feels, Images, and Memory in the Digital Ether /
Re/Dis-Solved Selves: (Re)Searching Selfies, (Inter)Facing the Face /
Notes on Contributors /
Summary:A woman is implicated in an assassination and captured on CCTV. Instead of looking for a truth behind the image - is she really guilty? - the writer and curator Shumon Basar dives deeper into the image itself. The kaleidoscopic result of this "paranoid, associative portrait" is the gateway for the authors of this volume to meme Basar's encounter with the digital image and to unfold what can be recognized as a post-digital image practice.To cut, to split, to reformat, to rearrange, to zoom - these techniques mix up the relation of reality and its representations and show that questions concerning the truthfulness of images under post-digital circumstances come to a dead end. The mimetic status of imagery, the search for the one and only original or false copy becomes an unsolvable quest in a world that is overloaded with images. What the authors of this volume therefore call for is not to neglect the concept of mimesis but to treat it as even more important - though as a dynamic not as a normative, hierarchical ranking tool.
ISBN:3846764957
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Sebastian Althoff, Elisa Linseisen, Maja-Lisa Müller, Franziska Winter, Michael Taussig, Jane Bennett, Uwe Wirth