An investigation of the computational turn in visual culture, centered
on the entangled politics and pleasures of data and images. If the
twentieth century was tyrannized by images, then the twenty-first is
ruled by data. In Technologies of Vision, Steve Anderson argues that
visual culture and the methods developed to study it have much to
teach us about today's digital culture; but first we must examine the
historically entangled relationship between data and images. Anderson
starts from the supposition that there is no great divide separating
pre- and post-digital culture. Rather than creating an insular field
of new and inaccessible discourse, he argues, it is more productive to
imagine that studying “the digital” is coextensive with critical
models—especially the politics of seeing and knowing—developed for
understanding “the visual.” Anderson's investigation takes on an
eclectic array of examples ranging from virtual reality, culture
analytics, and software art to technologies for computer vision, face
recognition, and photogrammetry. Mixing media archaeology with
software studies, Anderson mines the history of technology for insight
into both the politics of data and the pleasures of algorithms. He
proposes a taxonomy of modes that describe the functional relationship
between data and images in the domains of space, surveillance and data
visualization. At stake in all three are tensions between the
totalizing logic of data and the unruly chaos of images.
Les mer
The War Between Data and Images
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780262343343
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Random House Publishing Services
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter