Towards a Philosophy of Photography
Throughout his career, the influential new media theorist Vil©m Flusser kept the idea of gesture in mind: that people express their being in the world through a sweeping range of movements. He reconsiders familiar actions€"from speaking and painting to smoking and telephoning€"in terms of particular movement, opening a surprising new perspective on the ways we share and preserve meaning. A gesture may or may not be linked to specialized apparatus, though its form crucially affects the person who makes it.
These essays, published here as a collection in English for the first time, were written over roughly a half century and reflect both an eclectic array of interests and a durable commitment to phenomenological thought. Defining gesture as €œa movement of the body or of a tool attached to the body for which there is no satisfactory causal explanation,€ Flusser moves around the topic from diverse points of view, angles, and distances: at times he zooms in on a modest, ordinary movement such as taking a photograph, shaving, or listening to music; at others, he pulls back to look at something as vast and varied as human €œmaking,€ embracing everything from the fashioning of simple tools to mass manufacturing. But whatever the gesture, Flusser analyzes it as the expression of a particular form of consciousness, that is, as a particular relationship between the world and the one who gestures.
Country | USA |
Brand | imusti |
Manufacturer | Univ Of Minnesota Press |
Binding | Paperback |
ItemPartNumber | 9780816691289 |
UnitCount | 1 |
EANs | 9780816691289 |
ReleaseDate | 0000-00-00 |