Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 5-8 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
The Art of Subtraction is the first full-length study on the CD-ROM as a creative platform. Bruno Lessard traces the rise and relatively rapid fall of the CD-ROM in the 1980s and 1990s and its impact as a creative platform for media artists such as Jean-Louis Boissier, Zoe Beloff, Adriene Jenik, and Chris Marker. Although the CD-ROM was not a lasting commercial success it was a vibrant medium that allowed for experimentation in adapting literary works. Building on the work of Gilles Deleuze and Michele Foucault, Lessard establishes a comparative framework for linking digital adaptations with innovative concepts such as 'subtractive adaptation' and the 'object image' that will be of interest to researchers examining literary adaptations on other digital platforms such as websites, smart phones, tablets, and digital games. The Art of Subtraction is a fascinating study of intermediality in the late twentieth century and it provides the first chapter in the yet unwritten history of digital adaptation.
Bruno Lessard is an associate professor in the School of Image Arts at Ryerson University.
DedicationAcknowledgements IntroductionChapter 1: Back to the Future: The Rise of CD-ROMChapter 2: In the Realm of Digital Heterotopias: Exploring CD-ROM SpaceChapter 3: A Sensuous Gaze: Interactive Chronophotography and Relation-ImagesChapter 4: A Cinema of One’s Own: The Mediumistic Performance of the Female BodyChapter 5: Spaces of Desire: Mapping and Translating Lesbian RealityChapter 6: In Search of Lost Space: Photographic Memories and the Digital Punctum ConclusionEndnotesBibliography