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Pixilated Practices

Media, Ritual, and Identity

Christopher Peyton Miller

EPUB
ca. 18,99
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Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Medien, Kommunikation

Beschreibung

Media is a big part of our lives. We see and hear it everywhere. In this book Miller demonstrates how media has taken the place of ritual(s). Our everyday lives are constantly facilitated by media rituals. This media ritual process exists regardless of its content and is a phenomenon that overcomes our subjective experience with a constant flux of representations and seduction. Memory and mind are in a perpetual process of re-imaging, distortion, and violence. Human relationships can be comprised of sheer information sharing from any distance around the globe. The objective world around us is experienced and interpreted through the virtual worlds we are forced to participate in. The dialectic is barred and the flood of media images captures us in the univocal. Persons then understand that truth comes from their singular, isolated, and violated self. Therefore, the body in the real world feels foreign and we feel dissociated and anxious, reaching in a vain attempt for more media to fill and restore our bodily and spiritual needs. Our personhood and everything that we are lie under the influence of this media ritual process.

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Schlagwörter

Ritual, SOCIAL SCIENCE, Violence, Body Image, Media Studies, Subjectivity, Social, Sociology, Media, Power, Jacques Lacan, Pixilated Practices, Social and political philosophy, Philosophy, Christopher Peyton Miller, Social Sciences