Website: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=307142 Copyright: © 2005 British Society for the History of ScienceInternational audienceThe history of the magic lantern provides a privileged case study with which to explore the histories of projection, demonstration, illusion and the occult, and their different intersections. I focus on the role of the magic lantern in the work of the Jesuit Athanasius Kircher and the French Cartesian Abbé de Vallemont. After explaining the various meanings of the seventeenth-century concept of illusio, I propose a new solution for the long-standing problem that Kircher added the 'wrong' illustrations to his description of the lantern. The complex interaction between text,...
Mark Broughton, ‘Dissolving Spectators: Lantern History and the Royal Polytechnic Institution’, pape...
International audienceWhat should we make of a seventeenth-century wooden Christ, who drenched spect...
International audienceWhat should we make of a seventeenth-century wooden Christ, who drenched spect...
Website: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=307142 Copyright: ...
The optical projection of images has a long history. Technologies first developed in the sixteenth a...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
For centuries, various new media technologies have provided individuals with a set of powerful tools...
This contribution first discusses the age-old practice of the multi-sensory address of churchgoers i...
This dissertation is about the magic lantern and how it conveys meaning in a shifting media landscap...
The development of the magic lantern and the circus parallel each other. Magic lantern culture and t...
Taking its cue from magic lantern performance as a cultural practice, this article explores and expa...
Technologies of illusion are technologies used to evoke an emotional response in an audience by prod...
This contribution first discusses the age-old practice of the multi-sensory address of churchgoers i...
Technologies of illusion are technologies used to evoke an emotional response in an audience by prod...
Part III: Approaches to the Hidden History of Screen Culture: Frank Gray Engaging with the Magic Lan...
Mark Broughton, ‘Dissolving Spectators: Lantern History and the Royal Polytechnic Institution’, pape...
International audienceWhat should we make of a seventeenth-century wooden Christ, who drenched spect...
International audienceWhat should we make of a seventeenth-century wooden Christ, who drenched spect...
Website: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=307142 Copyright: ...
The optical projection of images has a long history. Technologies first developed in the sixteenth a...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
For centuries, various new media technologies have provided individuals with a set of powerful tools...
This contribution first discusses the age-old practice of the multi-sensory address of churchgoers i...
This dissertation is about the magic lantern and how it conveys meaning in a shifting media landscap...
The development of the magic lantern and the circus parallel each other. Magic lantern culture and t...
Taking its cue from magic lantern performance as a cultural practice, this article explores and expa...
Technologies of illusion are technologies used to evoke an emotional response in an audience by prod...
This contribution first discusses the age-old practice of the multi-sensory address of churchgoers i...
Technologies of illusion are technologies used to evoke an emotional response in an audience by prod...
Part III: Approaches to the Hidden History of Screen Culture: Frank Gray Engaging with the Magic Lan...
Mark Broughton, ‘Dissolving Spectators: Lantern History and the Royal Polytechnic Institution’, pape...
International audienceWhat should we make of a seventeenth-century wooden Christ, who drenched spect...
International audienceWhat should we make of a seventeenth-century wooden Christ, who drenched spect...