Book for the Electronic Arts
Title | Book for the Electronic Arts PDF eBook |
Author | Arjen Mulder |
Publisher | V2_ publishing |
Pages | 188 |
Release | 2000 |
Genre | Art and electronics |
ISBN | 906617255X |
The Electronic Word
Title | The Electronic Word PDF eBook |
Author | Richard A. Lanham |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 302 |
Release | 2010-06-15 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 0226469123 |
The personal computer has revolutionized communication, and digitized text has introduced a radically new medium of expression. Interactive, volatile, mixing word and image, the electronic word challenges our assumptions about the shape of culture itself. This highly acclaimed collection of Richard Lanham's witty, provocative, and engaging essays surveys the effects of electronic text on the arts and letters. Lanham explores how electronic text fulfills the expressive agenda of twentieth-century visual art and music, revolutionizes the curriculum, democratizes the instruments of art, and poses anew the cultural accountability of humanism itself. Persuading us with uncommon grace and power that the move from book to screen gives cause for optimism, not despair, Lanham proclaims that "electronic expression has come not to destroy the Western arts but to fulfill them." The Electronic Word is also available as a Chicago Expanded Book for your Macintosh®. This hypertext edition allows readers to move freely through the text, marking "pages," annotating passages, searching words and phrases, and immediately accessing annotations, which have been enhanced for this edition. In a special prefatory essay, Lanham introduces the features of this electronic edition and gives a vividly applied critique of this dynamic new edition.
The Art of Electronics
Title | The Art of Electronics PDF eBook |
Author | Paul Horowitz |
Publisher | |
Pages | 1227 |
Release | 2021 |
Genre | Electronic circuit design |
ISBN |
Learning the Art of Electronics
Title | Learning the Art of Electronics PDF eBook |
Author | Thomas C. Hayes |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 1150 |
Release | 2016-03-02 |
Genre | Technology & Engineering |
ISBN | 9780521177238 |
This introduction to circuit design is unusual in several respects. First, it offers not just explanations, but a full course. Each of the twenty-five sessions begins with a discussion of a particular sort of circuit followed by the chance to try it out and see how it actually behaves. Accordingly, students understand the circuit's operation in a way that is deeper and much more satisfying than the manipulation of formulas. Second, it describes circuits that more traditional engineering introductions would postpone: on the third day, we build a radio receiver; on the fifth day, we build an operational amplifier from an array of transistors. The digital half of the course centers on applying microcontrollers, but gives exposure to Verilog, a powerful Hardware Description Language. Third, it proceeds at a rapid pace but requires no prior knowledge of electronics. Students gain intuitive understanding through immersion in good circuit design.
Paper Electronic Literature
Title | Paper Electronic Literature PDF eBook |
Author | Richard Hughes Gibson |
Publisher | Page and Screen |
Pages | 216 |
Release | 2021-10-29 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9781625346001 |
The field of electronic literature has a familiar catchphrase, "You can't do it on paper." But the field has in fact never gone paperless. Reaching back to early experiments with digital writing in the mainframe era and then moving through the personal computer and Internet revolutions, this book traces the changing forms of paper on which e-lit artists have drawn, including continuous paper, documentation, disk sleeves, packaging, and even artists' books. Paper Electronic Literature attests that digital literature's old media elements have much to teach us about the cultural and physical conditions in which we compute; the creativity that new media artists have shown in their dealings with old media; and the distinctively electronic issues that confront digital artists. Moving between avant-garde works and popular ones, fiction writing and poetry generation, Richard Hughes Gibson reveals the diverse ways in which paper has served as a component within electronic literature, particularly in facilitating interactive experiences for users. This important study develops a new critical paradigm for appreciating the multifaceted material innovation that has long marked digital literature.
The Art of Dead Space
Title | The Art of Dead Space PDF eBook |
Author | Martin Robinson |
Publisher | National Geographic Books |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2013-02-05 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 1781164266 |
The Art of Dead Space is the ultimate gallery of the Dead Space universe, with over 300 images including sketches and concept art by acclaimed artists from breathtaking spacescapes to terrifying necromorphs, character designs to creating a religion, plus commentary from the artists themselves. Includes art from Dead Space, Dead Space: Extraction, Dead Space: Ignition, and Dead Space 2.
An Introduction to Electronic Art Through the Teaching of Jacques Lacan
Title | An Introduction to Electronic Art Through the Teaching of Jacques Lacan PDF eBook |
Author | David Bard-Schwarz |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 214 |
Release | 2014-01-03 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 1134753012 |
Electronic art offers endless opportunities for reflection and interpretation. Works can be interactive or entirely autonomous and the viewer's perception and reaction to them may be challenged by constantly transforming images. Whether the transformations are a product of the appearances or actions of a viewer in an installation space, or a product of a self-contained computer program, is a source of constant fascination. Some viewers may feel strange or unnerved by a work, while others may feel welcoming, humorous, and playful emotions. The art may also provoke a critical response to social, aesthetic, and political aspects of early twenty-first-century life. This book approaches electronic art through the teachings of Jacques Lacan, whose return to Freud has exerted a powerful and wide-ranging influence on psychoanalysis and critical theory in the twentieth century. David Bard-Schwarz draws on his experience with Lacanian psychoanalysis, music, and interactive and traditional arts in order to address aspects of the works the viewer may find difficult to understand. Dividing his approach over four thematic chapters—Bodies, Voices, Eyes, and Signifiers—Bard-Schwarz explores the links between works of new media and psychoanalysis (how we process what we see, hear, touch, imagine, and remember). This is a fascinating book for new media artists and critics, museum curators, psychologists, students in the fine arts, and those who are interested in digital technology and contemporary culture.