This is a revised, expanded, and updated edition of
the highly successful Visual Culture. Like its
predecessor, this new version is about visual literacy,
exploring how meaning is both made and transmitted in an
increasingly visual world. It is designed to introduce
students and other interested readers to the analysis of
all kinds of visual text, whether drawings, paintings,
photographs, films, advertisements, television or new
media forms. The book is illustrated with examples that
range from medieval painting to contemporary advertising
images, and is written in a lively and engaging style.
The first part of the book takes the reader through
differing theoretical approaches to visual analysis, and
includes chapters on iconology, form, art history,
ideology, semiotics and hermeneutics. The second part
shifts from a theoretical to a medium-based approach and
comprises chapters on fine art, photography, film,
television and new media. These chapters are connected
by an underlying theme about the complex relationship
between visual culture and reality.New for the second
edition are ten more theoretically advanced Key Debate
sections, which conclude each chapter by provoking
readers to set off and think for themselves. Prominent
among the new provocateurs are Kant, Baudrillard,
Althusser, Deleuze, Benjamin, and Foucault. New examples
and illustrations have also been added, together with
updated suggestions for further reading. The book draws
together seemingly diverse approaches, while ultimately
arguing for a polysemic approach to visual analysis.
Building on the success of the first edition, this new
edition continues to provide an ideal introduction for
students taking courses in visual culture and
communications in a wide range of disciplines, including
media and cultural studies, sociology, art and
design. |
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