1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910480884703321

Autore

Zimmer Catherine

Titolo

Surveillance Cinema

Pubbl/distr/stampa

New York, : NYU Press, 2015

Baltimore, Md. : , : Project MUSE, , 2021

©2015

ISBN

1-4798-7685-2

1-4798-5848-X

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (474 p.)

Collana

Postmillennial Pop

Disciplina

791.43656

Soggetti

Electronic surveillance in motion pictures

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies

Electronic books

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

IMD-Felder maschinell generiert

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

""Cover""; ""Contents""; ""Acknowledgments""; ""Author's Note""; ""Introduction: Surveillance Cinema in Theory and Practice""; ""1. Video Surveillance, Torture Porn, and Zones of Indistinction""; ""2. Commodified Surveillance: First-Person Cameras, the Internet, and Compulsive Documentation""; ""3. The Global Eye: Satellite, GPS, and the "Geopolitical Aesthetic"""; ""4. Temporality and Surveillance I: Terrorism Narratives and the Melancholic Security State""; ""5. Temporality and Surveillance II: Surveillance, Remediation, and Social Memory in Strange Days""; ""Conclusion""; ""Notes"".

Sommario/riassunto

In Paris, a static video camera keeps watch on a bourgeois home. In Portland, a webcam documents the torture and murder of kidnap victims. And in clandestine intelligence offices around the world, satellite technologies relentlessly pursue the targets of global conspiracies. Such plots represent only a fraction of the surveillance narratives that have become commonplace in recent cinema. Catherine Zimmer examines how technology and ideology have come together in cinematic form to play a functional role in the politics of surveillance. Drawing on the growing field of surveillance studies and the politics of



contemporary monitoring practices, she demonstrates that screen narrative has served to organize political, racial, affective, and even material formations around and through surveillance. She considers how popular culture forms are intertwined with the current political landscape in which the imagery of anxiety, suspicion, war, and torture has become part of daily life. From Enemy of the State and The Bourne Series to Saw, Caché and Zero Dark Thirty, Surveillance Cinema explores in detail the narrative tropes and stylistic practices that characterize contemporary films and television series about surveillance.