In the age of digital media how might we speak about images of torture, and how might we regard the pain of others? Using the examples of a short film by Alejandra Canales which recounts the experience of torture, and the Abu Ghraib photographs, this article seeks to repose the question of the function of the image and its relationship to epistemology. How do we know what we see? And how might we rethink the orthodox function of the image in the age of digital technology? In attempting to answer these questions, I argue that the production of virtual experience is a capacity of the human body, and that image making, like all genres of communication, is a practice in virtual community
Do digital screen media alter our sense of being in the world? Contained within this question are s...
This dissertation considers unresolved questions of the indexical real in documentary studies, drawi...
The pixel and the technique of pixelating faces belong to a politics of fear and a digital aesthetic...
In the age of digital media how might we speak about images of torture, and how might we might think...
The essay is an explorative reflection that focuses on a very specific part of a broader investigati...
The images of atrocity, either analog or digital, are always the trace of an encounter between the g...
This paper considers the ontological significance of invisibility in relation to the question ‘what ...
Images of the body in pain are the primary medium through which we come to know war, torture and oth...
There is a persistent belief in the power of media images to transform the events they depict. Yet d...
What does it feel like to be watched by a machine? How do we make sense of our present state of conc...
The title of this paper comprises of a question. A question in its essence is the opening of an apor...
This article considers photography’s role as a visual technology and the consequent effects of expan...
Exploring two recent examples of virtual reality (VR) short films designed to produce visceral exper...
Even though visibilization is legitimized as a technology of surveillance, where security is gained ...
At a time when technology seems increasingly poised to render the material realities of its users ob...
Do digital screen media alter our sense of being in the world? Contained within this question are s...
This dissertation considers unresolved questions of the indexical real in documentary studies, drawi...
The pixel and the technique of pixelating faces belong to a politics of fear and a digital aesthetic...
In the age of digital media how might we speak about images of torture, and how might we might think...
The essay is an explorative reflection that focuses on a very specific part of a broader investigati...
The images of atrocity, either analog or digital, are always the trace of an encounter between the g...
This paper considers the ontological significance of invisibility in relation to the question ‘what ...
Images of the body in pain are the primary medium through which we come to know war, torture and oth...
There is a persistent belief in the power of media images to transform the events they depict. Yet d...
What does it feel like to be watched by a machine? How do we make sense of our present state of conc...
The title of this paper comprises of a question. A question in its essence is the opening of an apor...
This article considers photography’s role as a visual technology and the consequent effects of expan...
Exploring two recent examples of virtual reality (VR) short films designed to produce visceral exper...
Even though visibilization is legitimized as a technology of surveillance, where security is gained ...
At a time when technology seems increasingly poised to render the material realities of its users ob...
Do digital screen media alter our sense of being in the world? Contained within this question are s...
This dissertation considers unresolved questions of the indexical real in documentary studies, drawi...
The pixel and the technique of pixelating faces belong to a politics of fear and a digital aesthetic...