Endless Intervals: Cinema, Psychology, and Semiotechnics Around 1900


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Description

Revealing cinema's place in the coevolution of media technology and the human

Cinema did not die with the digital, it gave rise to it. According to Jeffrey West Kirkwood, the notion that digital technologies replaced analog obscures how the earliest cinema laid the technological and philosophical groundwork for the digital world. In Endless Intervals, he introduces a theory of semiotechnics that explains how discrete intervals of machines came to represent something like a mind--and why they were feared for their challenge to the uniqueness of human intelligence.

Examining histories of early cinematic machines, Kirkwood locates the foundations for a scientific vision of the psyche as well as the information age. He theorizes an epochal shift in the understanding of mechanical stops, breaks, and pauses that demonstrates how cinema engineered an entirely new model of the psyche--a model that was at once mechanical and semiotic, discrete and continuous, physiological and psychological, analog and digital.

Recovering largely forgotten and untranslated texts, Endless Intervals makes the case that cinema, rather than being a technology assaulting the psyche, is in fact the technology that produced the modern psyche. Kirkwood considers the ways machines can create meaning, offering a fascinating theory of how the discontinuous intervals of soulless mechanisms ultimately produced a rich continuous experience of inner life.



Author: Jeffrey West Kirkwood
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Published: 10/25/2022
Pages: 256
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.75lbs
Size: 8.43h x 5.43w x 0.63d
ISBN13: 9781517912543
ISBN10: 1517912547
BISAC Categories:
- Performing Arts | Film | History & Criticism
- Social Science | Media Studies

About the Author

Jeffrey West Kirkwood is associate professor of art history at Binghamton University and fellow at Cornell University's Society for the Humanities. He is coeditor of Ernst Kapp's Elements of a Philosophy of Technology (Minnesota, 2018).