This essay traces the recent history of 3D satellite animation from its military origins to its visibility in the civic sphere. Specifically, technologies unveiled in 2004 as Google Earth first received widespread public visibility in the television coverage of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. The essay first maps the political economy of the “military-media-geotech” complex, focusing mainly on the coverage of the Iraq War as an nexus of interests. Second, the essay analyzes the aesthetic uses of 3D satellite animation on the news during this period, including how these imaging practices meshed with existing discourses such as the clean war, the weaponization of the civic gaze, and others. The essay concludes with thoughts regarding what the...
In post-9/11 America, digital war games have increasingly come to provide a space of cyber-deterrenc...
Media, industry and academia frequently depict the commercialization of satellite imagery as geospat...
The war against Iraq in 1990-91 was the first full-scale GIS war. It put geography on the public age...
This essay traces the recent history of 3D satellite animation from its military origins to its visi...
This paper explores the role of aerial and satellite imagery in the US military’s command, control, ...
“The ‘eyes’ made available in modern technological sciences shatter any idea of passive vision; thes...
Since the early 1990s, high-resolution satellite imagery and imagery data, made by a vast system of ...
From Crossref journal articles via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: epub 2020-07-16, issued 2020-07-...
What is it that we see when we encounter images of war on screens connected to online social networ...
—The WTO protests in Seattle witnessed the emergence of an international citizens’ movement for demo...
This study reports the findings of a systematic visual content analysis of 356 randomly sampled imag...
Volume 120, Issue 44https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/9840/thumbnail.jp
Islamic State’s (IS) image-warfare presents an auspicious opportunity to grasp the growing role of d...
Within the cultural imaginary of video games, armed conflicts have always occupied a central space. ...
The last two decades have seen a marked rise in the number of maps in the popular media, yet academi...
In post-9/11 America, digital war games have increasingly come to provide a space of cyber-deterrenc...
Media, industry and academia frequently depict the commercialization of satellite imagery as geospat...
The war against Iraq in 1990-91 was the first full-scale GIS war. It put geography on the public age...
This essay traces the recent history of 3D satellite animation from its military origins to its visi...
This paper explores the role of aerial and satellite imagery in the US military’s command, control, ...
“The ‘eyes’ made available in modern technological sciences shatter any idea of passive vision; thes...
Since the early 1990s, high-resolution satellite imagery and imagery data, made by a vast system of ...
From Crossref journal articles via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: epub 2020-07-16, issued 2020-07-...
What is it that we see when we encounter images of war on screens connected to online social networ...
—The WTO protests in Seattle witnessed the emergence of an international citizens’ movement for demo...
This study reports the findings of a systematic visual content analysis of 356 randomly sampled imag...
Volume 120, Issue 44https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/9840/thumbnail.jp
Islamic State’s (IS) image-warfare presents an auspicious opportunity to grasp the growing role of d...
Within the cultural imaginary of video games, armed conflicts have always occupied a central space. ...
The last two decades have seen a marked rise in the number of maps in the popular media, yet academi...
In post-9/11 America, digital war games have increasingly come to provide a space of cyber-deterrenc...
Media, industry and academia frequently depict the commercialization of satellite imagery as geospat...
The war against Iraq in 1990-91 was the first full-scale GIS war. It put geography on the public age...