Description

Book Synopsis

The overall subject of the book is visual culture. What sets it apart and gives it such an original emphasis is its multi-disciplinarity and the range of critical voices, ranging through film studies, architecture, creative practice, biology, pedagogy and media theory, which are brought to bear upon the question of visuality and its relationship to futurity.

In our everyday lives, we navigate across a vast sea of visual imagery. Yet, we rarely pause to question how or why we derive meaning from this sea. Nor do we typically contemplate the impact that it has on our motivations, our assumptions about science and about other people, and our actions as individuals and collectives. This book is a collection of interdisciplinary perspectives, from science to film, from graffiti and virtual environments to architecture and education that examines the ways in which we interact and engage with the visual elements of our environments.

Visual Futures provides an interdisciplinary examination of how we visualize and use visuals to make meaning within our environment. A diverse range of contributions and perspectives from biology, film, virtual reality, urban graffiti, architecture, critical pedagogy and education challenge our current attitudes, norms and practices of looking and seeing, opening up questions about the future. The future is a concept with significant political stakes and the work of rethinking and reimagining possible worlds requires a host of practices, which include the work of seeing, of image-making and of representation – all of which is political work taken up by the book contributors.

Primary readership will be among scholars and students of visual culture, media studies, digital cultures, fine art, architecture, education, science communication and sociology. Clearly aimed at an academic readership, it will also appeal to practising artists, architects, software developers and educators.



Table of Contents

Chapter 1 - See and see again: mapping the fractures in visual culture

Brett Caraway and Penny Kinnear

Chapter 2 - In between Whiteness: Pierre Bourdieu and Rudolph Valentino, an unlikely pairing

Elizabeth Peden

Chapter 3 - Ink to inkling: Artful messages in the visuals of biology

Charudatta Navare

Chapter 4 - Visualizing gentrification: Resistance and reclamation through the writing on the walls

Tracey Bowen

Chapter 5 - Intentional viewing: Decoding, learning, and creating culturally relevant architecture

Matthew Dudzik & Marilyn Corsen Whitney

Chapter 6 - Visualizing art-science entanglements for more habitable futures

Kylie Caraway

Chapter 7 - Seeing, sensing and surrendering the inside: Expressions of the adolescent self in a ‘structured illustrative disclosure’

Edie Lanphar and Phil Fitzsimmons

Chapter 8 - Picturing the state of visual literacy initiatives today

Dana Statton Thompson

Chapter 9 - Afterforward: To visualize the future is political work

Danielle Taschereau Mamers

Visual Futures: Exploring the Past, Present, and

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 23 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Tracey Bowen, Brett Caraway

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      View other formats and editions of Visual Futures: Exploring the Past, Present, and by Tracey Bowen

      Publisher: Intellect Books
      Publication Date: 11/02/2022
      ISBN13: 9781789384468, 978-1789384468
      ISBN10: 178938446X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The overall subject of the book is visual culture. What sets it apart and gives it such an original emphasis is its multi-disciplinarity and the range of critical voices, ranging through film studies, architecture, creative practice, biology, pedagogy and media theory, which are brought to bear upon the question of visuality and its relationship to futurity.

      In our everyday lives, we navigate across a vast sea of visual imagery. Yet, we rarely pause to question how or why we derive meaning from this sea. Nor do we typically contemplate the impact that it has on our motivations, our assumptions about science and about other people, and our actions as individuals and collectives. This book is a collection of interdisciplinary perspectives, from science to film, from graffiti and virtual environments to architecture and education that examines the ways in which we interact and engage with the visual elements of our environments.

      Visual Futures provides an interdisciplinary examination of how we visualize and use visuals to make meaning within our environment. A diverse range of contributions and perspectives from biology, film, virtual reality, urban graffiti, architecture, critical pedagogy and education challenge our current attitudes, norms and practices of looking and seeing, opening up questions about the future. The future is a concept with significant political stakes and the work of rethinking and reimagining possible worlds requires a host of practices, which include the work of seeing, of image-making and of representation – all of which is political work taken up by the book contributors.

      Primary readership will be among scholars and students of visual culture, media studies, digital cultures, fine art, architecture, education, science communication and sociology. Clearly aimed at an academic readership, it will also appeal to practising artists, architects, software developers and educators.



      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1 - See and see again: mapping the fractures in visual culture

      Brett Caraway and Penny Kinnear

      Chapter 2 - In between Whiteness: Pierre Bourdieu and Rudolph Valentino, an unlikely pairing

      Elizabeth Peden

      Chapter 3 - Ink to inkling: Artful messages in the visuals of biology

      Charudatta Navare

      Chapter 4 - Visualizing gentrification: Resistance and reclamation through the writing on the walls

      Tracey Bowen

      Chapter 5 - Intentional viewing: Decoding, learning, and creating culturally relevant architecture

      Matthew Dudzik & Marilyn Corsen Whitney

      Chapter 6 - Visualizing art-science entanglements for more habitable futures

      Kylie Caraway

      Chapter 7 - Seeing, sensing and surrendering the inside: Expressions of the adolescent self in a ‘structured illustrative disclosure’

      Edie Lanphar and Phil Fitzsimmons

      Chapter 8 - Picturing the state of visual literacy initiatives today

      Dana Statton Thompson

      Chapter 9 - Afterforward: To visualize the future is political work

      Danielle Taschereau Mamers

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