Visual Material Recognition

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel Schwartz
Author(s):  
Jan Borowicz

The author examines body politics in Nazi cinema and propaganda movies (medical short films and materials filmed in the Polish Ghettos) in terms of constructing the visual identity of a nation in opposition to the allegedly non-normative bodies of Jews and mentally ill persons. The author connects the visual material with notions of biopolitics (Foucault, Agamben, Esposito).


2021 ◽  
pp. 147035722098482
Author(s):  
Crispin Thurlow

The analytic focus of this article is the highly fashionable ‘infinity pool’, treated here as a visual-material realization of the cultural politics of super-elite mobility. The article is organized around a three-step analytic structure. First, I demonstrate how the infinity pool is mediatized as a status marker, and thus circulated and normalized. Second, I pinpoint the semiotic and ideological ways the infinity pool emerges as a mediated practice. Third, I examines how the infinity pool is also remediated on Instagram and thereby broadcast anew. Throughout, I evidence my analysis with visual texts drawn from a range of commercial, situated and digital media sources. My primary objective is to show how the infinity pool, as a mediatized, mediated and remediated practice, feeds the global semioscape, that more informal, often banal plane of cultural circulation where images, ideas and aesthetic ideals seed themselves all over the place. In this way, and however frivolous or innocuous infinity pools may seem, they also spread a particularly privileged way of looking at, and being in, the world.


2019 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 308-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. P. Osipov ◽  
E. Yu. Usachev ◽  
S. V. Chakhlov ◽  
S. A. Shchetinkin ◽  
O. S. Osipov

2007 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 146-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariana Cruz ◽  
Roberto Quiroz ◽  
Mario Herrero
Keyword(s):  

1983 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 211-214
Author(s):  
Elissa Koff ◽  
Joan C. Borod ◽  
Marjorie Nicholas ◽  
Betsy White

This study compared measurements of hands, feet, and hemi-faces taken from original and mirror-reversed photographs to determine whether a hemispace-bias exists in size measurements. Posers were adult right- and left-handers (50% female). In 80% of the measurement comparisons (total N = 84), there was complete agreement; there were no instances of right-left reversals among the discrepant comparisons. The side of the body measured as larger was independent of the side of space in which it appeared The lack of such bias in physical measurements is discrepant with data suggesting a left-hemispace preference in psychological judgments of visual material.


Author(s):  
Myrto Tsilimpounidi

This paper follows the multiple layers of an urban fabric that is stereotypically characterised as ‘post-socialist’, yet in essence, it is subject to ongoing transitions – much like the notion of being queer. What can we learn from queer theory in relation to post-socialist urban theory? What are the methodological advancements that derive from a queer approach to research? In this light, the presentation breaks the usually logocentric academic discourse as it engages with the premises of visual sociology. Using visual material from Bratislava focusing on urban inscriptions (street art, urban interventions), it opens up a discussion about the changes in the city and the struggles of different groups.


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