{"product_id":"films-that-work-harder-the-circulation-of-industrial-film-9789462986534","title":"Films That Work Harder: The Circulation of","description":"\u003cb\u003eBook Synopsis\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003eWhat unleashed the forces of global capitalism which continue to shape the world that we live in? Economists and economic historians variously point to innovations in logistics and trade, the emergence of a new set of business-friendly values and the emergence of new forms of applied knowledge in early modernity to solve this riddle. This book focuses on the moving image as a factor of economic development. In a series of in-depth cases studies at the intersection of film and media studies, science and technology studies and economic and social history, Films That Work Harder: The Circulations of Industrial Film presents an in-depth, global perspective on the dynamic relationship between film, industrial organization and economic development. Bringing together new research from leading scholars from Europe, Asia, Australia and North America, this book combines the state of the art in the field with an agenda for a future research.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cb\u003eTable of Contents\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003eIntroduction: A sequel, and a shift – Vinzenz Hediger, Florian Hoof, Yvonne Zimmermann \u003cbr\u003eSection 1 : Networks and Flows: Visualizing Value Chains \u003cbr\u003eVinzenz Hediger: The Aesthetics of the Global Value Chain. Container Shipping, Media Networks and the Problem of Visibility in the Global Sphere of Circulation \u003cbr\u003eLee Grieveson: Object Lessons and Infrastructural Imperialism \u003cbr\u003eThomas Turnbull: Energy and Industrial Film: energo-critical registers \u003cbr\u003eFlorian Hoof: The Afterlife of Industrial Film: Weak Dispositives, Choice Architecture, and the Contemporary Circulation of Industrial Cinema \u003cbr\u003eSection 2: Operative Iconographies, Industry and the Nation State \u003cbr\u003eIra Plein: Beautiful Luxembourg, Steel Works, and a Swimming Pool. The Corporate Film Columeta and the Formation of a Corporate and a National Image. \u003cbr\u003eLucie Cesalkova: Hydropower for a Sealess Nation. Representation of Water Energy in Czech Visual Culture \u003cbr\u003eZimmer: Modern Water Sprites. History, Nature, and Landscape in Vattenfall’s Film Production in the 1950s \u003cbr\u003eTakuya Tsunoda: Taxonomy of Techniques: Visions of Industrial Cinema in Postwar Japan \u003cbr\u003eYvonne Zimmermann: The Power of Flows: The Spatiality of Industrial Films on Hydropower in Switzerland \u003cbr\u003eSection 3: Institutions and Distribution Frameworks: Archives, Festivals, Fairs \u003cbr\u003eSteve Foxon: Industry on Screen: The British Documentary in Distribution. British Transport Films – A Case Study \u003cbr\u003eBrian Jacobson: On the Red Carpet in Rouen: Industrial Film Festivals and a World Community of Film Makers \u003cbr\u003eHaidee Wasson: Cinema and Industrial Design: Showmanship, Fairs and the Exhibition Film. \u003cbr\u003eSection 4: Teaching Oneself and Others \u003cbr\u003eGregory A. Waller: Putting Films to Work: System, The Magazine for Business \u003cbr\u003eCharles Acland: New Media for the Schools of Tomorrow. The A.V. Instructional Films of Robert W. Wagner \u003cbr\u003eGuillherme Machado: We Must Know More than We Can See: Databases of Vocational Training and the Emergence of Cognitive Ergonomics \u003cbr\u003eScott Anthony: Free enterprise film: Aims of Industry, economic propaganda and the development of a neoliberal cinema Section 5: Post\/Colonial Industries and Third Industrial Cinemas \u003cbr\u003eRudmer Canjels: Framing Local and International Sentiments and Sounds. Unilever and Royal Dutch Shell in a Changing Nigeria. \u003cbr\u003eTom Rice: Working Through the End of Empire \u003cbr\u003eRavi Vasudevan: Cinema-going on the Railway Tracks: Transportation, Circulation and Exhibition of Information Film in Colonial India \u003cbr\u003eSalomé Aguilera Skvirsky: The Latin American Process Film. \u003cbr\u003eSection 6 : Production Cultures and\/of the Industrial Film: Amateurs and Professionals \u003cbr\u003eMaria Vinogradova: Soviet Industrial Film Across Categories: Negotiating Between Utility, Art and Science \u003cbr\u003eLuca Peretti: “There exists no life more daring and adventuresome than that of an oil drigger”. \u003cbr\u003eAlexander Stark: Industrial Film from the Home Studio: Amateur Cinema and Low Budget Corporate Moving Image Culture in West Germany, from 1950 – 1977 \u003cbr\u003eAnna Maria Falchero: Movie and Industry in Italy: The “Golden Age” of Italian Industrial Documentary (1950-1970) \u003cbr\u003eAlain Michel: A Film that Doesn’t Seem to Work: A Shot of Renault’s Early Assembly Line (1920 to 1929). A Case Study, Methodology and 3D Restitution for Film Analysis \u003cbr\u003eSection 7: Ephemeral Artistry: Ecologies of Authorship in Industrial Cinema \u003cbr\u003eChristian Bonah: Business and Art: Pharmaceutical Industries, Film Production and Circulation, and the French Film Production Company ScienceFilm, 1960-1980. \u003cbr\u003ePatrick Russell: Transfer of Power: films officers in the British coal industry \u003cbr\u003eMartin Stollery: Saudi Arabia’s John Ford? Robert Yarnall Richie, Desert Venture and Ephemeral Authorship in Industrial Film. \u003cbr\u003eAnnette Davison: Sounds Industrial: Understanding the Contribution of Music and Sound in Industrial Films \u003cbr\u003eAlessandro Cecchi: Creative Films for Creative Corporations.","brand":"Amsterdam University Press","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":50473234694487,"sku":"9789462986534","price":191.9,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0817\/1739\/5799\/files\/9789462986534.jpg?v=1744905807","url":"https:\/\/bookcurl.com\/products\/films-that-work-harder-the-circulation-of-industrial-film-9789462986534","provider":"Book Curl","version":"1.0","type":"link"}