28 Class sessions
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Intro to Visual Culture. Live!. 22 Guest Lecturers. Many, MANY PowerPoint slides . 28 Class sessions. Starring Mark Olson, with your Host Professor Kristine Stiles. Keepin’ It Real. Reality Television & Visual Culture. Reality TV. Real people (real = ordinary) Unscripted
28 Class sessions
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Presentation Transcript
Intro to Visual Culture Live! 22 Guest Lecturers Many, MANY PowerPoint slides 28 Class sessions Starring Mark Olson, with your Host Professor Kristine Stiles
Keepin’ It Real Reality Television & Visual Culture
Reality TV • Real people (real = ordinary) • Unscripted • Ordinary / Extraordinary Situations • Commercial • Entertainment
Flow Space of the home Segmented Flow Liveness potential Segmented Audiences Divergent Platforms Timeshifting Specificity of the Televisual
Television & Real Life • “Television’s real value is to make people participants in ongoing experiences. Real life is vastly more exciting than synthetic life, and this is real life drama with audience participation.” 1969 - Television news anchor describing the televising of the Apollo moon landing
Spectacular mode of address • Mode of address - establishing a relationship between the text and an audience (preferred reading) • Play of immediacy & hypermediacy
Immediacy • Erasure of the gap between signifier & signified / between representation and reality • Forget the presence of the medium • Grasping the real
Hypermediacy • Remind the viewer of the medium -- making us conscious that the reality we see is mediated • Multiplying the levels and sites of mediation
Surveillance • Reality TV promotes the idea that surveillance is a natural mode through which to observe the social world • Unaware of cameras, or forget that they are there, yielding “truth” and “reality”
The Confession • Visual reality & the problem of interiority • Acting vs. Being (being real)
Hyperreality • The authentic fake (Umberto Eco) • A blending of reality and representation (or performance & identity) where there is no clear indication where the former stops and the latter begins.