ABSTRACT
Film archives have long been dedicated to preserving movies, and they've been nimble in recent years in adapting to the changing formats and technologies through which cinema is now created and presented. This collection makes the case for a further step: the need to see media technologies themselves as objects of conservation, restoration, presentation, and research, in both film archives and film studies. Contributors with a wide range of expertise in the film and media world consider the practical and theoretical challenges posed by such conservation efforts and consider their potential to generate productive new possibilities in research and education in the field.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|156 pages
Small and Portable
chapter Chapter 4|9 pages
Ghosts of the Past: Frame Rates, Cranking, and Access to Early Cinema
chapter Chapter 6|11 pages
Contextualizing the Apparatus: Film in the Turn-of-the-Century Sears, Roebuck & Co.'s Consumers Guide
chapter Chapter 10|11 pages
The Video Compact Disc and the Digital Preservation of Indonesian Cinema
chapter Chapter 11|11 pages
“Bolex Artists”: Bolex Cameras, Amateurism, and New York Avant-Garde Film
chapter Chapter 12|11 pages
The Tripod or “When Professionals Turn Amateur”: A Plea for an Amateur Film Archaeology
chapter Chapter 13|11 pages
Imagining the User of Portapak: Countercultural Agency for Everyone!
part II|68 pages
Medium and Not Easily Portable
chapter Chapter 16|12 pages
The Analog Film Projector in Marijke van Warmerdam's Digitized Film Installations
chapter Chapter 17|10 pages
The Illusion of Movement, the Illusion of Color: The Kinemacolor Projector, Archaeology, and Epistemology
part III|98 pages
Large and Not Portable
