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Technology's pulse : essays on rythm in german modernism

Fiche technique

Format : Broché
Nb de pages : 269 pages
Poids : 400 g
Dimensions : 15cm X 22cm
ISBN : 979-10-95155-08-9
EAN : 9791095155089

Technology's pulse

essays on rythm in german modernism


Collection(s) | Rythmanalyses
Paru le
Broché 269 pages

Quatrième de couverture

Rhuthmos

Modernity, as has often been observed, was fundamentally concerned with questions of temporality. The period around 1900, in particular, witnessed numerous efforts both to rationalize time and to liberate non-rational temporal experience. Within this broader framework, rhythm came to form the object of an intense and widespread preoccupation. Rhythmical research played a central role not only in the reconceptualisation of human physiology and labour in the late 19th century, but also in the emergence of a new leisure culture in the early 20th. The book traces the ways in which ideas about rhythm were mobilised both to conceptualise modernity and to forge a new understanding of temporal media that came to mark the mass-mediated experience of the 1920s : a conception of artistic media as mediators between the organic and the rational, the time of the body and that of the machine.

Biographie

Michael Cowan is Professor in Film Studies at St Andrews University and former William Dawson Associate Professor of German and Film at McGill University. He is an award-winning author of numerous books and essays on German modernity, visual culture and film history.

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