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[Commlist] New book: Amateur Media and Participatory Cultures. Film, Video, and Digital Media.
Tue Mar 12 22:56:54 GMT 2019
We are pleased to announce the publication of our co-authored book
'Amateur Media and Participatory Cultures. Film, Video, and Digital
Media' (Routledge, 2019), https://bit.ly/2GhEVyw (ISBN: 9781138226142.
Also available in eBook).
'Amateur Media and Participatory Cultures' aims to define the boundary
line between today’s amateur media practice and the canons of
professional media and film practice. Identifying various feasible
interpretative frameworks, from historical to anthropological
perspectives, the volume proposes a critical language able to cope with
amateur and new media’s rapid technological and interpretative
developments. Conscious of the fact that amateur media continue to be
seen as the benchmark of visual records of authentic rather than
mass-media-derived events, we paid particular attention to the ways in
which diverse sets of concepts of amateur media have now merged across
global visual narratives and everyday communication protocols. Building
on key research questions and content analysis in media and
communication studies, we have assessed differences between professional
and amateur media productions based on the ways in which the
‘originators’ of an image have been influenced by, or have challenged,
their context of production. It is our hope that the book’s methodical
and interdisciplinary approach provides valuable insights into the ways
in which visual priming, cultural experiences and memory-building are
currently shaped, stored and redistributed across new media technologies
and visual networks.
Reviews:
‘This fiercely original book widens amateur media cartographies by
recalibrating with interdisciplinary methodologies, global visualities,
and participatory media platforms. It insists amateurism is not
marginal, but ubiquitous as its variegated practices migrate across
histories, ethics, counter-histories, archives, technologies. A
massively significant, daring, rigorous, and field-changing intervention
into amateur media studies.’ Patricia R. Zimmermann, Professor of Screen
Studies, Ithaca College, USA
‘As one of the founders of this new field of research, I can vouch that
we’ve been all waiting for this type of book on amateur media. The
authors have carefully considered the last decades of research done on
the theme of amateur media practice, from home movie making to digital
and online productions, and raised pertinent theoretical issues as well
as opened new research avenues. A timely and important book.’ Professor
Roger Odin, Emeritus Professor of Information Sciences and Communication
at Paris 3 - Sorbonne Nouvelle.
Authors:
Annamaria Motrescu-Mayes is Visiting Lecturer in new and digital media
at the Department of Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge;
Fellow and Tutor at Clare Hall; and a member of the Cambridge Digital
Humanities and of the Centre for the Study of Global Human Movement. She
is the author of 'Visual Histories of South Asia' (co-edited with Marcus
Banks, 2017) and of 'British Women Amateur Filmmakers: National Memories
and Global Identities' (with Heather Norris Nicholson, 2018), and has
written extensively on the theme of colonial amateur film practice and
imperial studies. Motrescu-Mayes is also the founder of the Amateur
Cinema Studies Network.
Susan Aasman is Associate Professor at the Media Studies Department and
Director of the Centre for Digital Humanities at the University of
Groningen. Her field of expertise is in media history, with a particular
interest in amateur film and documentaries, digital culture and digital
archives, web history and digital history. She was a senior researcher
in the research project 'Changing Platforms of Ritualised Memory
Practices: The Cultural Dynamics of Home Movie Making' (2012–2016).
Together with Andreas Fickers and Jo Wachelder, Susan has co-edited
'Materializing Memories: Dispositifs, Generations, Amateurs' (2018).
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