Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Ways of Worldmaking and Haunted Media



I mentioned Nelson Goodman's Ways of Worldmaking this week in class, thought I'd send some information about it if anyone is interested. Nelson Goodman was an American analytic philosopher, who's students included Noam Chomsky and Hilary Putnam, who focused on topics in aesthetics (as well as other things). His Book, Ways of Worldmaking (which can be previewed on Google books HERE) posits that we are constantly producing new "worlds" all the time out of previously constructed worlds. The work is very relativistic for analytic philosophy but is extremely accessible. I highly recommend it.


I also thought I'd also mention Haunted Media by Jeffrey Sconce for those who were interested in spirit photography, the paranormal, and new media. Jeffrey Sconce is a media historian and cultural theorist at Northwestern University and his book, Haunted Media (which can be previewed on Google books HERE), is a history of new media starting with photography and moving all the way into the contemporary period. It is brilliantly written and his thesis is smart and cogent. Again, I highly recommend it.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Persian Art of Tazhib: The Micro & Macro

animation& the uncanny/jan svankmajer's alice & wonderland as a parallel world

Metropolis (behind the scenes)

Nostalgia in Day is Done


In 2005, Mike Kelly presented "Day is Done," a project that appropriated found images of high school ceremonies and yearbook portraits into a series of performances, sound works and installations. Reproducing these images and events alongside the original documentation, Kelly created doubles of these rituals and thus created an uncanny work of fact and fiction, memory and reality. The resulting work presents a personal utopia/ dystopia through one's nostalgia for simpler days and the recognition that memory romanticizes the past and inevitably distorts the reality we so strongly miss.

James Raymond - Dark Krystal a world within our own mind