Skip to content
MIT Press
  • MIT Press
  • Books
    • Column
      • View all subjects
      • New releases
      • Catalogs
      • Textbooks
      • Series
      • Awards
    • Column
      • Authors
      • Distributed presses
      • The MIT Press Reader
      • Podcasts
      • Collections
    • Column
      • MIT Press Direct

        MIT Press Direct is a distinctive collection of influential MIT Press books curated for scholars and libraries worldwide.

        • Learn more
  • Journals
    • column
      • Journals all topics
      • Economics
      • International Affairs, History, & Political Science
    • column
      • Arts & Humanities
      • Science & Technology
      • Open access
    • column
      • MIT Press journals

        MIT Press began publishing journals in 1970 with the first volumes of Linguistic Inquiry and the Journal of Interdisciplinary History. Today we publish over 30 titles in the arts and humanities, social sciences, and science and technology.

        • Learn more
  • Open Access
    • column
      • Open access at the MIT Press
      • Open access books
      • Open access journals
    • column
      • Direct to Open
      • MIT Open Publishing Services
      • MIT Press Open on PubPub
    • Column
      • Open access

        The MIT Press has been a leader in open access book publishing for over two decades, beginning in 1995 with the publication of William Mitchell’s City of Bits, which appeared simultaneously in print and in a dynamic, open web edition.

        • Learn more
  • Resources
    • column
      • Current authors
      • Prospective authors
      • Instructors
    • column
      • Media inquiries
      • Booksellers
      • Rights and permissions
    • column
      • Resources

        Collaborating with authors, instructors, booksellers, librarians, and the media is at the heart of what we do as a scholarly publisher. If you can’t find the resource you need here, visit our contact page to get in touch.

        • Learn more
  • Give
  • About
    • Column
      • About
      • Jobs
      • Internships
      • MIT Press Editorial Board
      • MIT Press Management Board
      • Our MIT story
    • Column
      • Catalogs
      • News
      • Events
      • Conferences
      • Bookstore
    • Column
      • The MIT Press

        Established in 1962, the MIT Press is one of the largest and most distinguished university presses in the world and a leading publisher of books and journals at the intersection of science, technology, art, social science, and design.

        • Learn more
  • Contact Us
Newsletter
MIT Press
Newsletter
  • Home
  • technology & engineering
  • Soft Cinema
Soft Cinema

Soft Cinema

Navigating the Database

by Lev Manovich and Andreas Kratky

  • $32.00 DVD video

6 x 8 in,

  • DVD video
  • 9780262134569
  • Published: November 30, -0001
  • Publisher: The MIT Press

$32.00

  • Penguin Random House
  • Amazon
  • Barnes and Noble
  • Bookshop.org
  • Indiebound
  • Indigo
  • Books a Million

Other Retailers:

  • Amazon.co.uk
  • Blackwells
  • Bookshop.org
  • Foyles
  • Hive
  • Waterstones
  • Penguin Random House
  • Amazon
  • Barnes and Noble
  • Bookshop.org
  • Indiebound
  • Indigo
  • Books a Million
  • Request permissions
  • Description
  • Author(s)

Leading artists from different cultural fields collaborate on three films that explore the aesthetic possibilities of computer-driven cinema.

What kind of cinema is appropriate for the age of Palm Pilot and Google? Automatic surveillance and self-guided missiles? Consumer profiling and CNN? To investigate this question, Lev Manovich, one of today's most influential thinkers in the fields of media arts and digital culture, paired with award-winning new media artist and designer Andreas Kratky. They have also invited contributions from leaders in other cultural fields: DJ Spooky, Scanner, George Lewis, and Johann Johannsson (music), servo (architecture), Schoenerwissen/OfCD (information visualization), and Ross Cooper Studios (media design). The results of their three-year explorations are the three "films" presented on this DVD. Although the films resemble the familiar genres of cinema, the process by which they were created demonstrates the possibilities of soft(ware) cinema. A "cinema," that is, in which human subjectivity and the variable choices made by custom software combine to create films that can run infinitely without ever exactly repeating the same image sequences, screen layouts and narratives. Mission to Earth, a science fiction allegory of the immigrant experience, adopts the variable choices and multi-frame layout of the Soft Cinema system to represent "variable identity." Absences is a lyrical black and white narrative that relies on algorithms normally deployed in military and civilian surveillance applications to determine the editing of video and audio. Texas, a "database narrative," assembles its visuals, sounds, narratives, and even the identities of its characters, from multiple databases. The DVD was designed so that every viewing of each film generates a different version.

Lev Manovich is Professor in the PhD Program in Computer Science at The Graduate Center, City University of New York. He is the author of The Language of New Media (MIT Press), hailed as “the most suggestive and broad-ranging media history since Marshall McLuhan,” and other books.

Andreas Kratky has been responsible for the design and codirection of a number of groundbreaking new media projects, including the award-winning DVDs That's Kyogen and Bleeding Through--Layers of Los Angeles 1920-1986 (both published by ZKM).

Related Books

Espionage
Teaching Machines
Invention and Innovation
Fertility Technology
Cultural Analytics
The Smartness Mandate
Analog
The Language of New Media
Beyond Digital
To Know Is to Compare
logo
  • Column 1
    • Books
    • Journals
    • The MIT Press Reader
    • Podcasts
    • Imprints
  • Column 2
    • The MIT Press
      • About
      • Bookstore
      • Catalogs
      • Conferences
      • Press Editorial Board
      • Jobs
      • Internships
      • Press Management Board
      • News
      • Staff
      • Code of Conduct
      • Give
  • Column 3
    • Site Help
      • Accessibility
      • FAQ
      • Our eBooks
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms of Use
  • Column 4
    • Resources
      • Current Authors
      • Prospective Authors
      • Booksellers
      • Instructors
      • Rights and Permissions
      • Media Inquiries
      • MIT Discounts
  • Column 5
    • Digital
      • CogNet
      • Digital Partners and Products
      • Knowledge Futures Group
      • MIT Press Direct
  • US

    One Broadway 12th Floor Cambridge, MA 02142

  • UK

    Unit 57710 PO Box 6945 London W1A 6US UK

  • Contact

Connect

© 2023 MIT Press. All Rights Reserved.

Powered by Supadu