HomePolitics & Social Sciences BooksRemediation: Understanding New Media
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Remediation: Understanding New Media

hardcoverJanuary 1, 1999
Regular price $223.65 USD
Regular price Sale price $223.65 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
New In Stock
ISBN-13: 9780262024525 ISBN-10: 0262024527
Publisher
MIT Press
Binding
hardcover
Published
January 1, 1999
Weight
1.6 lbs
Dimensions
24.10×2.50×19.10 cm

About this book

Remediation: Understanding New Media by Grusin, Richard. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780262024525.

"Jay Bolter and Richard Grusin see through new media, seeing through in every sense of that phrase: staying with it, seeing with it, and most of all looking past it, both forward and back. They provide a language for what we feel almost as a haptic irritation. Their `double logic of remediation provides a double dose of good sense and visionary calm, of sound scholarship and philosophic speculation." -- Michael Joyce, Vassar College Media critics remain captivated by the modernist myth of the new: they assume that digital technologies such as the World Wide Web, virtual reality, and computer graphics must divorce themselves from earlier media for a new set of aesthetic and cultural principles. In this richly illustrated study, Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin offer a theory of mediation for our digital age that challenges this assumption. They argue that new visual media achieve their cultural significance precisely by paying homage to, rivaling, and refashioning such earlier media as perspective painting, photography, film, and television. They call this process of refashioning "remediation," and they note that earlier media have also refashioned one another: photography remediated painting, film remediated stage production and photography, and television remediated film, vaudeville, and radio. In chapters devoted to individual media or genres (such as computer games, digital photography, virtual reality, film, and television), Bolter and Grusin illustrate the process of remediation and its two principal styles or strategies: transparent immediacy and hypermediacy. Each of these strategies has a long and complicated history. A painting by the seventeenth-century artist Pieter Saenredam, a photograph by Edward Weston, and a computer system for virtual reality are all attempts to achieve transparent immediacy by ignoring or denying the presence of the medium. A medieval illuminated manuscript, an early twentieth-century photomontage, and todays buttoned and windowed multimedia applications are instances of hypermediacy--a fascination with the medium itself. Although these two strategies appear contradictory, they are in fact the two necessary halves of remediation.