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Rating: Summary: Highly recommended Review: (Planeta.com Journal) -- About a century ago the early years of cinema witnessed the creation of veritable masterpieces. For more than a generation (1980s-1930s) filmmakers produced seminal works that defined the very language of the medium. So at the turn of this century, how do we recognize the equivalent works in "new media" -- computers, the web and other digital compositions? A scientist and theoretician, Lev Manovich guides the way in his exceptional book.New media links content and interface, providing an unlimited number of ways of accessing a work. This is the norm of the digital age. Manovich argues "modern media is the new battlefield for the competition between database and narrative." (p. 234) But new media does not begin with the Web. In fact, there's no better place to begin than with the 1929 avant garde film classic, Dziga Vertov's "Man with a Movie Camera," which serves as a guide in an innovative prologue. Later Manovich sums up the achievement of this classic film: "Vertov is able to achieve something that new media designers still have to learn -- how to merge database and narrative into a new form (p. 243). The Language of New Media offers a rigorous theory of new media. The author discusses new media's reliance on traditions, such as the use of the rectangular frame. He also demonstrates how concepts from film theory and art history play a vital role in understanding where we stand today. This book is highly recommended.
Rating: Summary: New Languages of Communication and Relationship? Review: According to the back cover introduction, "Lev Manovich offers the first systematic and rigorous theory of new media". He does this by describing the developing history of available media as a context for understanding the current digital electronics technology. On the media of today he notes: "One general effect of the digital revolution is that the avant-garde aesthetic strategies came to be embedded in the command and interface metaphors of the computer software. The contemporary computer media are actually the past avant-garde materialized!" As is perhaps clear from the book's title, "The Language of New Media" is primarily about the communication 'languages' that the various media make available through their existence. A language, in the sense that Mr. Manovich uses the term, is a collection of methods[in a media-tool/medium context] and their effect on that which may be communicated by a particular work. A wide range of examples, from published or exhibited creations, are cited to help describe the fruits of using a particular method/context that he details. The strongest recurring theme in the book is how it deals with the history of cinematic language. Cinema is the media which brings under it's umbrella the greatest range of production methodology, so comes the closest to tying the whole text together into a coherent narrative. Otherwise, the book would tend to be more a kind of dictionary of available media methodologies/effects/attributes, each with their own implication towards constructing a sensual or conceptual experience. Marshall Mcluhan's point, that "The medium is the message", may well serve as the best description of the contents of this book. For those seeking an analysis on the "meaning of the messages", that the media artists convey, it is probably best to seek additional books as a supplement to this one.
Rating: Summary: A hardcover sleeping pill. Review: I found this book boring personally. It may be a better read for folks that haven't worked in the industry. This was required reading for me in the Masters Program for Information Design & Technology at Georgia Tech.
Rating: Summary: My name is Lev and I'm clueless. Review: In this fine work of literature, Mr. Manovich illustrates that he can talk a lot about computers, even though he doesn't know anything about them. He makes a plethora of fallacious statements, such as when he argues that all digital media must be discrete and contain only discrete objects, neglecting one can define a continuous geometry using discrete coefficients. If his statment were true, there'd be no way to draw a circle in Adobe Illustrator, but I know I've done that before! Read this book if you don't know what a computer is and won't mind misinformation presented to prove points that are stupid and worthless anyway.
Rating: Summary: Chickens are humans too! Review: Lev exemplifies the new breed of animal activist, a take-no-prisoners, fearless warrior who isn't afraid to ruffle a few feathers. His theory of parallel species is fascinating. The notion that chickens and humans evolved from the same primate origin seemed ludicrous at first but is clearly laid out and elucidated in this book. Fascinating reading for anyone interested in biology and the future of our planet and its relation to new media.
Rating: Summary: Language of New Media rocks Review: Lev Manovich tracks developments in the social theories of industrialization and the technological developments in media that make associations between the two, illustrating that the architecture or fabric of media is as impactful as the content. I relish this examination of the form of new media as political. Also, the writing is 'poetic', the research and analysis are thorough and the writing is *very accessible.
Rating: Summary: Critical Thinking about New Media Review: That Lev Manovich's The Language of New Media is a risk-taking and stimulating contribution to the discourse surrounding new media is evident even before page one. The book's prologue consists of short extracts indicating Manovich's central premises that will be fleshed out in the text. As short polemical notes, the quotations serve to engender argument as well as energize, performing the new thinking hinted at in Manovich's remarkable treatment of new media. By the time Manovich has thanked the various Internet mailing lists where he regularly shared excerpts of his text prior to its publication, and the hardware he used when writing The Language of New Media, the reader is attentive to the original way in which Manovich intends to deal with his vast subject. Given this book's title it bears asking what comprises the new media? Manovich enumerates them early on-"Web sites, virtual worlds, virtual reality (VR), multimedia, computer games, interactive installations, computer animation, digital video, cinema, and human-computer interfaces" (8-9). What, then, are the new media's "language"? By language, Manovich intends both the diverse conventions used by new media practitioners to organize data and structure the user's experience, and the various discourses that surround the new media. Grounded in an analysis of the ways in which new media have appropriated the forms and conventions of older art and communications media, Manovich's central concern, and that of his book's first five chapters, is the influence of cinema's language on the new media; the final chapter examines the inverse. (The link to cinema should not be over-stated however, as Manovich never fails to include other relevant precedents ranging from Renaissance oil painting to Marey's photographic gun to WWII radar technology.) Each chapter concludes with compelling case studies that serve to define and elaborate the theories advanced. The contribution this remarkable book makes to the existing literature on new media and related topics is a product of the author's wide-ranging expertise and intellectual rigor. (Manovich holds advanced degrees in cognitive psychology and visual culture and has been working with computer media for almost twenty years as an artist, designer, animator, computer programmer, and teacher.) In assessing "new media objects" (his term), their technologies, and their style, Manovich is always mindful of how social, economic and cultural considerations inform and are informed by the very technologies and styles which they consider. Manovich studiously avoids ahistorical generalizations by asking what is different between more recent technologies and those preceding them; fortunately he does not hesitate to frequently conclude "not much." Overall, it is hard to over-estimate the importance of The Language of New Media to the field of the same name, as it is the first rigorous and far-reaching theorization of the subject. Readers from expert to novice will almost certainly be thankful for Manovich's studious attention to definitions, both those commonly (mis)used and those coined by the author. The Language of New Media is required reading not only for those concerned with the discourses surrounding new media, but also for anyone critically engaged with contemporary art and culture. (A longer version of this review was first published in CAA.Reviews, August 2001.)
Rating: Summary: Groundbreaking Look at New Media Review: The Language of New Media takes on the interfaces, operations, illusions, and forms of new media. Unlike some of his predecessors in media theory, Manovich is careful to designate the object of his study, and to spell-out that which he does not consider new media. [....] Readers will find clearly-written definitions of the forms and functions of new media, from menus, filters, and plug-ins to database algorithms. Transitions in modes of representation and interpretation, reading and writing, from print to network culture are also explored, under the aegis of bringing classic theory to contemporary work. The [book] also breaks ground in piercing the semantics of new media's lexical accoutrements, positing a vocabulary with which to discuss new media. [...] Manovich's title becomes a double entendre when he exceeds this possibly banal charge by discussing the way in which new media is itself a language: a system of representation. Manovich [an admirer of soviet montage filmmakers] performs his own Kuleshov effect, the ultimate art historical feat, in making new media not only more understandable but arguably more valuable, by virtue of its relationship to the history of image-making. [....] It is strangely ironic that Lev Manovich learned computer programming the same way that the Soviet Montage filmmakers perfected their craft: on paper. Manovich's school lacked computers, so the artist hand-wrote code, whereas pupils at the famed VGIK film school lacked film stock and so "spliced" papyrus. Perhaps it is to this lack of physical resources that Manovich owes his copiously inside-out knowledge of digital media.
Rating: Summary: An Unfortunate Classic Review: The language of the book is unneccessarilly opaque, and in it's attempts to tie the author's descriptive language with the language of current digital technology it is strained and often veers toward inaccuracy in desperation. Ok, I said it. Sorry. That said, the book offers a powerful theory of new media, and introduces a very useful vocabulary. Bleah.
Rating: Summary: An Unfortunate Classic Review: The language of the book is unneccessarilly opaque, and in it's attempts to tie the author's descriptive language with the language of current digital technology it is strained and often veers toward inaccuracy in desperation. Ok, I said it. Sorry. That said, the book offers a powerful theory of new media, and introduces a very useful vocabulary. Bleah.
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