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Networked David Lynch

Critical Perspectives on Cinematic Transmediality

Marcel Hartwig Andreas Rauscher Peter Niedermuller

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Paperback

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English
Edinburgh University Press
11 March 2025
Networked David Lynch is a multi-disciplinary reconsideration of Lynch's uvre in the context of the challenges and opportunities offered by transmedia environments and networks of the 21st century. This collection builds on state-of-the-art-research concepts like video-graphic criticism and video essays to provide a fresh and important approach to any study of David Lynch's uvre. As such, Networked David Lynch is an attractive entry point to current media theory and recent film history, appealing to cinephiles, academics, researchers, and students. This multi-disciplinary reader provides immediate relevance to university courses focusing on modern film history and on current theory in film, television, and media studies. The scope of approaches featured in the book provides an informative basis for courses on transmedia and media convergence, sound studies, musicology, cultural studies, and American studies.
Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781474497077
ISBN 10:   1474497071
Pages:   280
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Marcel Hartwig is a Lecturer in English and American Studies at the University of Siegen. He has contributed to academic readers and international journals in the field of media studies, television studies, literary criticism, gender studies, and popular culture. Currently, he is finalizing his post-doctoral project in the field of transatlantic studies, Transit Cultures: 18th Century Medical Discourses and Knowledge Media in the North American Colonies. He is also co-editor of Media Economies: Perspectives on American Cultural Practices (2014) and the Rock Music Studies special issue on American Rock Journalism (2017). Andreas Rauscher is a Visiting Professor for Media Culture Studies at Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg. Previously, he was Senior Lecturer at the Department for Media Studies at University of Siegen. He was also Visiting Professor of Media Studies at Christian Albrechts-Universität Kiel and at Johannes-Gutenberg-University Mainz. His research focuses on film, game, comic, and cultural studies, transmedia aesthetics and genre theory. His publications as an author and co-editor have covered the Simpsons, superhero movies, comics and games, John Carpenter, Star Wars, James Bond and the Czechoslovakian Nová Vlna, in addition to an introduction to Game Studies. Peter Niedermüller is a Researcher in Musicology and Digital Humanities at University of Mainz. Between 2011 and 2012 he was a Visiting Professor at the German Historical Institute in Rome. In 2019, he was appointed Professor at Johannes-Gutenberg-University Mainz. His research focuses on studies in musical interpretation and film music. He previously published Klangkultur und musikalische Interpretation. Italienische Dirigenten im 20. Jahrhundert (2018). He is a member of the Kiel Society in the Research of Film Music and a co-editor of the Kieler Beiträge zur Filmmusikforschung.

Reviews for Networked David Lynch: Critical Perspectives on Cinematic Transmediality

A provocative volume that ""illustrates how cinema becomes a wide-reaching phenomenon on different platforms and media contexts"" (p. 259). A valuable resource for those interested in film, television, music, cultural studies, and mass media. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. --J. I. Deutsch ""CHOICEconnect"" This interdisciplinary book on David Lynch is as innovative and intrepid as its subject. Exploring Lynch's use of music, physiognomy, hauntology, set design, visual effects, social media and the femme fatale, the authors reposition the director as a network of intertextual links that constantly morphs and remediates itself. This is an important transmedial intervention into media studies --Holly Rogers, Goldsmiths, University of London


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