Description

Book Synopsis
Visions of Electric Media is an historical examination into the early history of television, as it was understood during the Victorian and Machine ages. How did the television that we use today develop into a functional technology? What did Victorians expect it to become? How did the 'vision' of television change once viewers could actually see pictures on a screen?

We will journey through the history of 'television': from the first indications of live communications in technology and culture in the late nineteenth century, to the development of electronic televisual systems in the early twentieth century. Along the way, we will investigate the philosophy, folklore, engineering practices, and satires that went into making television a useful medium.

Table of Contents
Introduction: The Lifespan of a Media Technology The Telephonoscope: How a Satire of Electric Light became a Visual Telephone The Far-Sight Machine and the Kinetograph: How Television Brought Liveness to the Cinema Human Seeing-Machines: From Annihilating Space to Mediated Vision Interlude The Illuminating Engineers: Standardizing Vision The Ikonophone: Bell Laboratory's Two-Way Television Project Epilogue Bibliography Index

Visions of Electric Media: Television in the

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    A Hardback by Ivy Roberts

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      View other formats and editions of Visions of Electric Media: Television in the by Ivy Roberts

      Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
      Publication Date: 28/10/2019
      ISBN13: 9789462986596, 978-9462986596
      ISBN10: 9462986592

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Visions of Electric Media is an historical examination into the early history of television, as it was understood during the Victorian and Machine ages. How did the television that we use today develop into a functional technology? What did Victorians expect it to become? How did the 'vision' of television change once viewers could actually see pictures on a screen?

      We will journey through the history of 'television': from the first indications of live communications in technology and culture in the late nineteenth century, to the development of electronic televisual systems in the early twentieth century. Along the way, we will investigate the philosophy, folklore, engineering practices, and satires that went into making television a useful medium.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: The Lifespan of a Media Technology The Telephonoscope: How a Satire of Electric Light became a Visual Telephone The Far-Sight Machine and the Kinetograph: How Television Brought Liveness to the Cinema Human Seeing-Machines: From Annihilating Space to Mediated Vision Interlude The Illuminating Engineers: Standardizing Vision The Ikonophone: Bell Laboratory's Two-Way Television Project Epilogue Bibliography Index

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