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Wide-Screen Television and Home Movies
Author(s) -
Tom Steward
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
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Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2213-0969
DOI - 10.18146/2213-0969.2014.jethc070
Subject(s) - movie theater , convergence (economics) , exhibition , technological convergence , interdependence , television studies , film theory , art , sociology , film studies , aesthetics , media studies , visual arts , computer science , social science , telecommunications , economics , economic growth
In this article, Tom Steward uses past interrelations of television and cinema spectatorship, exhibition, production and aesthetics to historicize phenomenological digital-era discourses on, ontological definitions of, and cultural arguments about television and cinema convergence. He argues that television and cinema assisted in defining each other as late 20th Century media and cultural forms, have a multi-directional industrial and artistic flow, and are often interdependent in reception and distribution. Television and cinema convergence demonstrates the need for historical breadth in media convergence theory and an understanding of medium-specificity that incorporates interactions with other media.

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