Cinemulacrum
A Secret History of Film / Video, 1960-2010- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2012
Summary
Cinemulacrum, a conflation of “cinema,” the art of the Hollywood film, and simulacrum, a reality counterfeit, was coined to designate contemporary media culture. This period is distinguished by the advent of digital film/video, an ideology of fantasy as the central narrative of movies and television, and a ruling audience demographic of the young adult. A pre-cinemulacrum era (1960-1980) and Age of Cinemulacrum (1980 to the present day) are demarcated to examine the fall—and rise—of classical Hollywood and the hegemony of television in a media dyad of movies and television.
Cinemulacrum argues that the convergence of technology, ideology, and audience represent the primary factors surrounding the social immediacy of movies and television, and that video, fantasy, and the young adult have replaced film, realism, and the family as the outstanding attributes of contemporary media culture.
A contemporary vision of media culture emerges in the 1980s. George Lucas and Steven Spielberg lead a populist new wave, combining technological modernity with a retro sensibility grounded both in B-movie melodramas and the genteel, domesticated television sit-coms of the 1950s. Television, however, gains an unrivaled authority through the spinoff production model and the expanded resources of cable with its 24/7 news, sports, and movies.
Advocating a new or alternate history of movies and television, the author assesses critical trends from America's hybrid media culture. The pre-cinemulacrum era is unraveled through an “apocrypha of violence”—a cycle of conflicting portrayals of movie violence and heroism in Bonnie and Clyde, Dirty Harry, The Godfather, Taxi Driver, and Rocky. The Age of Cinemulacrum is then characterized by the ‘making of simulacra’—the proliferating nature of movie sequels, prequels, and “special editions”—and by television's multi-generational young adult demographic of The Cosby Show, Seinfeld, and The Simpsons.
The author concludes his study with an annotated timeline—“The Seven Ages of Cinemulacrum”—listing the history-making movies and television programs in contemporary media culture.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2012
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-7618-5841-6
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-7618-5842-3
- Publisher
- Hamilton Books, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 122
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- A. Digital Film/Video: Reality Paradigm No access
- B. Media Hegemony: Video, Fantasy, and the Young Adult No access
- C. Cinemulacrum is not a Dystopia No access
- Chapter 1. The Fall—and Rise—of Classical Hollywood: Ben-Hur (1959)-The Godfather (1972) No access Pages 1 - 6
- A. Violence, Populism, and the New Apocrypha: Dirty Harry (1971)-Rocky (1976) No access
- B. Bicentennial Blues: Taxi Driver (1974)-The Deer Hunter (1977) No access
- C. Looking Backward, Forwardly: Star Wars (1977)-Heaven’s Gate (1982) No access
- A. The Making of Simulacra: The Empire Strikes Back (1980)-Revenge of the Sith (2005) No access
- B. The Hollywood Epic in the Age of Cinemulacrum: Platoon (1985)-The Return of the King (2003) No access
- C. The Comic Outsider, Underground Humor on TV, and the Rise of Black Culture: Saturday Night Live (1974)-Chappelle’s Show (2003) No access
- D. Hollywood Redux: Risky Business (1985)-Million Dollar Baby (2004) No access
- E. Auteurs, Art Films, and the American Avant-Garde: Raging Bull (1980)-Psycho (1998) No access
- Jean-Luc Godard and the Death of Cinema: Notre Musique (2005)-Avatar (2009) No access
- 3 Axioms No access
- The Copy, not the Original: The Archetype of Media Culture No access
- Apocrypha of Violence No access
- A Cinemulacrum Timeline No access
- The 7 Ages of Cinemulacrum, or a Secret History of Film/Video No access
- Index No access Pages 109 - 120
- About the Author No access Pages 121 - 122





