Remediating Transcultural Memory - (Media and Cultural Memory) by Dagmar Brunow (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- The impact of digital global media, geopolitical changes and migration demands new theorizations within memory studies.
- About the Author: Dagmar Brunow, Linnéuniversitet, Växjö, Sweden.
- 263 Pages
- Literary Criticism, General
- Series Name: Media and Cultural Memory
Description
About the Book
Remediating Transcultural Memory offers a new approach to the study of mediated memories. It offers new theorizations of remediation, the archive and transculturality from the perspective of film and media studies. Drawing on contemporary debates inBook Synopsis
The impact of digital global media, geopolitical changes and migration demands new theorizations within memory studies. Despite the growing field of media memory studies, the impact from film and media studies has been scarce within memory studies. This unique study offers new theorizations of three crucial concepts for media memory studies: remediation, transculturality and the archive.
This book takes a closer look at the media specificity of archival footage and how it is adapted, translated and appropriated. In its original approach this work reflects upon the role of documentary film images for the construction of memory. By merging film and media studies with memory studies the work offers multiple theoretical and methodological approaches for everyone interested in the heritage of audiovisual media: film and media scholars, memory scholars, historians, art historians, social scientists, librarians or archivists, curators and festival programmers alike.
About the Author
Dagmar Brunow, Linnéuniversitet, Växjö, Sweden.