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The Multiple Dispositifs of (Early) Cinema
Author(s) -
Frank Keßler
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cinémas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1705-6500
pISSN - 1181-6945
DOI - 10.7202/1071098ar
Subject(s) - movie theater , perspective (graphical) , variety (cybernetics) , pragmatics , sociology , art , aesthetics , visual arts , media studies , computer science , philosophy , linguistics , artificial intelligence
In recent debates regarding the effects of digitalization on cinema, the concept of dispositif is generally used to refer to a model of spectatorship that was defined in the 1970s by Jean-Louis Baudry. Consequently, when theorists affirm that there is an “explosion” of the cinematic dispositif in the twenty-first century, they partake in this monolithic conception, which does not acknowledge the fact that watching films in the twentieth century occurred in a variety of ways, both diachronically and synchronically. Critiquing such a view, this article proposes to understand the concept of dispositif from the perspective of a historical pragmatics and to use it as a heuristic tool to analyze the vast range of moving image dispositifs that have existed historically, as well as the new dispositifs that emerge in today’s digital mediascape.

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