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Digital Tarkovsky

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  • Svyatoslav Yushinhar citeratför 5 år sedan
    If that is the case, you are not alone. It is reported that in the US alone, the average adult spends two hours and 51 minutes on their smartphone every day.
  • Polina Kolozaridihar citeratför 5 år sedan
    Tarkovsky forces us to experience the fact that things take time.
  • Критик Смирноваhar citeratför 2 år sedan
    The chances are that you are reading these words on a mobile device. There is a good chance that you are spending a lot of time on that device every day. If that is the case, you are not alone. It is reported that in the US alone, the average adult spends two hours and 51 minutes on their smartphone every day. That is eight minutes longer than Andrei Tarkovsky’s film Stalker. But it is a good hour and ten minutes shorter than the average time that a French worker once spent watching TV.
  • Анастасия Безруковаhar citeratför 2 år sedan
    Our addiction to the mobile device’s platform services then enmeshes us in time intervals that run between our cravings for updates, shorter or longer latency periods when no updates happen, the moments of actual updates, and the velocities of all other events in our lives and environ
  • Анастасия Безруковаhar citeratför 2 år sedan
    particular web-specific entities
  • Анастасия Безруковаhar citeratför 3 år sedan
    temporal and spatial dimensions of everyday life
  • jimena astridhar citeratför 3 år sedan
    the proto-cinematic narrative
  • jimena astridhar citeratför 3 år sedan
    the temporal and spatial dimensions of everyday life are complexly interconnected with digital screens. Time and space are fragmented and displaced as individuals are decreasingly ‘grounded’ or tethered to a kind of physical shared reality.”
  • jimena astridhar citeratför 3 år sedan
    “If it were possible to demonstrate that lived reality is always a construct of the imagination and thus perceived only on condition of being fictional, irreducibly haunted by phantasms, then we would finally be forced to conclude that perception is subordinated to — is in a transductive relationship with — the imagination; that is, there would be no perception outside imagination, and vice versa, perception then being the imagination’s projection screen. The relationship between the two would be constituted of previously non-existent terms, and this in turn would mean that life is always cinema [...].”

    — Bernard Stiegler
  • b9708761461har citeratför 3 år sedan
    This is something that cinema can do but the interface cannot, at least outside of VR. The duration of the cinematic experience, and its life-likeness to the world outside, are feeding into a continuum
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