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Visual Technologies Image Reproduction, and the Copy Jennifer Correia Sarah Martin
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Photography Invention of the photographic camera Early uses of photography –Institutional and Personal Photography emerged as a popular medium Foucault’s idea of discourse “ We cannot claim to have really seen anything before having photographed it” -Emile Zola
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Worlds FIRST Camera
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Motion and Sequence Photographic images of movement set the stage for the development of cinema Stereoscope –Two images overlap and make them appear animated –Creates an illusion of depth
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Cinema Invention of Cinema involved the invention of a moving picture camera, projection, and flexible form of film (celluloid) Film Projector –Went from private viewing to public viewing to group experience of spectators Cinema added the elements of temporality, movement, and eventually sound to photography Mid- twentieth century filmmakers
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Cinema Gateway to Television Nineteenth-century visual technologies of photography and cinema established a pathway for the emergence of digital technology in the twentieth century. Each new form of visual technology builds of the codes of previous technologies, but owns its on epistemic shift Television and cinema
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Cinema Gateway to Television YouTube - The First Movie YouTube - Avatar Movie Trailer YouTube - I Love Lucy - Chicken and RiceYouTube - I Love Lucy - Chicken and Rice YouTube - its t shirt timeee
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Copies, Ownership, and Copyright The benefits of the new reproductive technologies is that computers and digital imaging have made the possibilities for reproduction and ownership of images virtually limitless. The possibilities for reproduction of any image are highly contingent on the legal management of images.
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Copies, Ownership, and Copyright Continued… Copyright – taken literally, means “ the right to copy.” The term refers to not one but a bundle of rights. This bundle includes the rights to distribute, produce, copy, display, perform, create, and control derivative works based from the original.
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Copyrights Copyright grants legal protection to the “expression of an idea,” not the idea itself. The fixed expression is deemed to belong uniquely to someone – the photographer, writer, painter- who created it. The word copyright suggests a policy that grants the rights to copy. When in actuality, it regulates and restricts copying.
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Reproduction and the Digital Image The most widely discussed difference between conventional and digital photography concerns what happens after the take, before the print is struck. Anyone with a digital camera, a home computer, and a cable can download images not only to print them but also to copy them into programs in which they can be edited.
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From a Goalkeeper’s View
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