“The Disposable Camera” theorizes the relationship between the cinematic image and energy resources. Framed by the emergent carbon-neutral cinema, the recent UCLA report on the film industry’s environmental footprint, as well as common perceptions about digital sustainability, “The Disposable Camera” posits that cinema has always been aware of its connection to the environment, the realm from which it sources its power, raw materials and, often enough, subject matter. But because the natural environment is so inextricably embedded within film’s basic means of production, distribution and reception, its effects remain as overlooked as they are complex. “The Disposable Camera” argues that cinematic history and theory can and indeed ought t...
Mercilessly plundered and looted, the earth has been condemned by mankind to merely stand back and w...
Screen media has held a mirror toward world events since its inception, with filmmakers occupying a ...
The aim of this paper is to raise questions about how cinema can allow us to rethink our relationshi...
The tension between the aspiration of a documentary to be green, eco or environmental and the enviro...
Cinematic Affect in a Time of Ecological Emergency is situated within a moving image practice that a...
The Environmental Documentary provides the first extensive coverage of the most important environmen...
Eco-disasters such as coal-mining accidents, oil spills, and food-borne diseases appear regularly in...
This item is part 2 of the Screening Nature entry.This item is part 2 of the Screening Nature entry....
Ecomedia studies tend to analyze ideological preoccupations as they appear in textual content. While...
This dissertation investigates the relationships between film and the natural world. Building upon e...
"Moving images take us on mental and emotional journeys, over the course of which we and our worlds ...
When you think of film and the environment, does your mind turn to how cinema has depicted nature an...
What can an image do? And what can we do with images? These are broad questions, and need narrowing ...
During the 1970s a spate of ecologically-themed science fiction films were produced in North America...
This article charts a media historical relation between radiation and celluloid film, ranging from t...
Mercilessly plundered and looted, the earth has been condemned by mankind to merely stand back and w...
Screen media has held a mirror toward world events since its inception, with filmmakers occupying a ...
The aim of this paper is to raise questions about how cinema can allow us to rethink our relationshi...
The tension between the aspiration of a documentary to be green, eco or environmental and the enviro...
Cinematic Affect in a Time of Ecological Emergency is situated within a moving image practice that a...
The Environmental Documentary provides the first extensive coverage of the most important environmen...
Eco-disasters such as coal-mining accidents, oil spills, and food-borne diseases appear regularly in...
This item is part 2 of the Screening Nature entry.This item is part 2 of the Screening Nature entry....
Ecomedia studies tend to analyze ideological preoccupations as they appear in textual content. While...
This dissertation investigates the relationships between film and the natural world. Building upon e...
"Moving images take us on mental and emotional journeys, over the course of which we and our worlds ...
When you think of film and the environment, does your mind turn to how cinema has depicted nature an...
What can an image do? And what can we do with images? These are broad questions, and need narrowing ...
During the 1970s a spate of ecologically-themed science fiction films were produced in North America...
This article charts a media historical relation between radiation and celluloid film, ranging from t...
Mercilessly plundered and looted, the earth has been condemned by mankind to merely stand back and w...
Screen media has held a mirror toward world events since its inception, with filmmakers occupying a ...
The aim of this paper is to raise questions about how cinema can allow us to rethink our relationshi...