Hybrid Histories: Technologies of Memory and the Cultural Dynamics of Home Movies, 1895-2005

    Activity: Talk or presentation typesTalk or presentation (not at a conference)Academic

    Description

    In this presentation, I will present my PhD dissertation on the cultural dynamics of home movies in the twentieth century. In my research, I have investigated how various generations have recorded their memories on film, video and digital media, and, more specifically, how changes in these "technologies of memory'' have shaped new forms of home movie making and screening. Covering the period from the invention of the film camera in the late nineteenth century, the introduction of 9.5mm, 16mm, 8mm small-gauges and Super 8 film technologies for amateurs, via home video to digital media technologies, this study addresses the complex interrelations between the materiality of film, video and digital media technologies, their social usages and cultural meanings from a long-term historical perspective. Focusing on specific periods of transition, it becomes clear that different media technologies, user practices and discourses not only succeed each other in time, but also increasingly interrelate, interact or even transform each other. Maintaining both a diachronic and a synchronic perspective on media transitions, I propose an alternative form of media historiography that rethinks media histories beyond the frameworks of change and continuity by perceiving hybridity as a constant factor in media historical development.
    Period25 Jun 2018
    Event titleResearching Amateur Film Cultures: Methods and Materials
    Event typeWorkshop
    LocationMarburg, GermanyShow on map

    Keywords

    • home movies
    • media history
    • amateur film
    • longue durée
    • amateur media
    • dispositif
    • generations