This article explores the shifting materiality and meanings of television as an exhibited object. To consider the fluctuating discourses involved in the display of analogue TV sets, the article critically examines how the object has been re-presented: aestheticized, interrogated, destabilised and reorganized as science, modernity, art, and media heritage. An interpretive approach drawing on Walter Benjamin and media archaeology is supported by archival sources. The term “analogue rupture” is introduced to critically assess the implications of, and discontinuities involved, in analogue television’s status as art and heritage. Digital media heritage discourses that invite us to regard obsolescence as inevitable progress are questioned
Media archaeological methods for extending the lifetime of new media into ‘old media’ have experienc...
Prevailing debates on the meaning and relationships between historical collections and virtual/digit...
Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, ranging...
This article explores the shifting materiality and meanings of television as an exhibited object. To...
Video art is a continually developing practice that evolves alongside ever changing technological ad...
Television\xe2\x80\x99s material culture offers a starting point into this exploration of television...
VCRs were once prized for their ability to allow amateurs to create material records of ephemeral te...
Digitisation of historic TV material is driven by the widespread perception that archival material s...
There is a branch of history called archaeology. The source of information that archaeologists value...
Focussing on the technical process of transmission, this chapter conducts a media philosophical refl...
This article considers possible futures for television (TV) studies, imagining how the discipline mi...
In the modern, overabundant information landscape, information is accessible on and across multiple ...
The interest for lost media practices and materials appears intrinsic to contemporary popular and ma...
Transversal Media Practices work across specific situations of technological development, critically...
This chapter discusses retrospective trends in music and audiovisual art, sometimes known as Haunto...
Media archaeological methods for extending the lifetime of new media into ‘old media’ have experienc...
Prevailing debates on the meaning and relationships between historical collections and virtual/digit...
Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, ranging...
This article explores the shifting materiality and meanings of television as an exhibited object. To...
Video art is a continually developing practice that evolves alongside ever changing technological ad...
Television\xe2\x80\x99s material culture offers a starting point into this exploration of television...
VCRs were once prized for their ability to allow amateurs to create material records of ephemeral te...
Digitisation of historic TV material is driven by the widespread perception that archival material s...
There is a branch of history called archaeology. The source of information that archaeologists value...
Focussing on the technical process of transmission, this chapter conducts a media philosophical refl...
This article considers possible futures for television (TV) studies, imagining how the discipline mi...
In the modern, overabundant information landscape, information is accessible on and across multiple ...
The interest for lost media practices and materials appears intrinsic to contemporary popular and ma...
Transversal Media Practices work across specific situations of technological development, critically...
This chapter discusses retrospective trends in music and audiovisual art, sometimes known as Haunto...
Media archaeological methods for extending the lifetime of new media into ‘old media’ have experienc...
Prevailing debates on the meaning and relationships between historical collections and virtual/digit...
Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, ranging...