Performing Digital, 9780367598990
Paperback
Digital archives transform culture: performance, representation, and history reimagined.
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Performing Digital

multiple perspectives on a living archive

WAS$21.80

$16.32

  • Paperback

    280 pages

  • Release Date

    30 June 2020

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Summary

Performing Digital: Archiving Culture in the Digital Age

Digital technologies have transformed archives in every area of their form and function, and as technologies mature so does their capacity to change our understanding and experience of material and performative cultural production.

There has been an exponential explosion in the production and consumption of video online and yet there is a scarcity of knowledge and cases about video and the digital archive. This book se…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780367598990
ISBN-10:036759899X
Series:Digital Research in the Arts and Humanities
Author:David Carlin, Laurene Vaughan
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:Routledge
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:280
Release Date:30 June 2020
Weight:544g
Dimensions:234mm x 156mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

‘The Circus Oz Living Archive project that forms the basis of this book is particularly novel. Not only does it apply a museum-like approach to recordings of performances, it does so in a way that is purposefully useful to, and accepted by, the performers themselves. This book provides a unique insight into the transformations of the performing arts, media and cultural heritage sectors taking place in early 21st century.’ Seb Chan, Director of Digital & Emerging Media at the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, New York, USA (from the Foreword) ’With a central focus on the Melbourne-based Circus Oz Living Archive, Performing Digital: Multiple Perspectives on a Living Archive proposes an alternative to the notion that an archive is a simple repository of the past. Open to the question of how an archive might alter a living practice, Performing Digital explores how the idea of liveness can be embedded in and extracted from the archive, how an archive can be a performative cartography, and how this dynamic mapping might alter the temporality of the event, the emphasis as much on programming issues as on theoretical questions. How, it asks, can archives be truly moving?’ Erin Manning, Concordia University, Canada ’This book with its focus on the living archive of Circus Oz, designed as a digital collage of tricks and tales, insightfully advances our thinking about the user-oriented archive, or an artist-oriented archive. Its writers conceive of a flat ontology whereby artefacts and memories in multiple combinations may re-animate the frisson of the live event, and yet devolve their power to a future form of knowledge. It is a study of bold creative research shared with its artistic community.’ Rachel Fensham, University of Melbourne, Australia

About The Author

David Carlin

David Carlin and Laurene Vaughan are both Associate Professors in the School of Media and Communication at RMIT University, Australia.

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