Film History as Media Archaeology: Tracking Digital Cinema

Thomas Elsaesser

2016

Since cinema has entered the digital era, its very nature has come under renewed scrutiny. Countering the 'death of cinema' debate, Film History as Media Archaeology presents a robust argument for the cinema's current status as a new epistemological object, of interest to philosophers, while also examining the presence of moving images in the museum and art spaces as a challenge for art history. The current study is the fruit of some twenty years of research and writing at the interface of film history, media theory and media archaeology by one of the acknowledged pioneers of the 'new film history' and 'media archaeology'. It joins the efforts of other media scholars to locate cinema's historical emergence and subsequent transformations within the broader field of media change and interaction, as we experience them today.

Contents

Acknowledgements

Thomas Elsaesser 

I Early Cinema

1. Film History as Media Archaeology

Thomas Elsaesser 

2. The Cinematic Dispositif

Thomas Elsaesser 

II The Challenge of Sound

3. Going ‘Live’

Thomas Elsaesser 

4. The Optical Wave

Thomas Elsaesser 

III Archaeologies of Interactivity

5. Archaeologies of Interactivity

Thomas Elsaesser 

6. Constructive Instability

Thomas Elsaesser 

IV Digital Cinema

7. Digital Cinema

Thomas Elsaesser 

8. Digital Cinema and the Apparatus

Thomas Elsaesser 

V New Genealogies of Cinema

9. The ‘Return’ of 3D

Thomas Elsaesser 

10. Cinema, Motion, Energy, and Entropy

Thomas Elsaesser 

VI Media Archaeology as Symptom

11. Media Archaeology as the Poetics of Obsolescence

Thomas Elsaesser 

12. Media Archaeology as Symptom

Thomas Elsaesser