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dc.contributor.authorPunt, Michael
dc.date.accessioned2023-07-27T10:09:23Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.identifier.urihttps://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/handle/10026.1/21074
dc.description.abstract

One may be forgiven for considering photography and cinema as comfortable fellow travellers along the same road sharing the technological genealogy of pictorial realism. However, despite many mechanical and optochemical similarities they have significantly distinct technological archaeologies which separate their history, form, style, and aesthetics in a way that can crucially impact on how we think about beauty. For example, although there were many precedents for projected moving images before 1895, in 1995 there was a general acceptance among film historians that, despite these competing claims, we had reached the centenary of cinema.

dc.format.mediumPrint
dc.publisherUniversity of Plymouth
dc.relation.ispartofField Observations.
dc.titleVisualizing the Untranslateable
dc.typec-other-writing
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Business
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Business|School of Art, Design and Architecture
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|REF 2021 Researchers by UoA
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Users by role
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Users by role|Academics
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|REF 2021 Researchers by UoA|UoA32 Art and Design: History, Practice and Theory
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Admin Group - REF
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Admin Group - REF|REF Admin Group - FoAH
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Users by role|Researchers in ResearchFish submission
dc.publisher.placePlymouth
dc.date.updated2023-07-27T10:09:22Z
dc.rights.embargodate2023-2-14


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