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'''The Work of Culture in the Age of Cybernetic Systems'''
  '''The Work of Culture in the Age of Cybernetic Systems'''
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'''Intro'''<br>
'''Intro'''<br>
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'''page3'''<br>
'''page3'''<br>
Mechanical Reproduction Film Culture <br>
What at the heart of the change in mechanical reproduction that effects the work of art is the impossibility of reproducing its authenticity. However, it emancipates art from its parasitical dependence on ritual, and turn to a new basis in politics, which are held in check by the economic system surrounding the means of mechanical reproduction.
What at the heart of the change in mechanical reproduction that effects the work of art is impossibility of reproducing its authenticity. It emancipates art from its parasitical dependence on ritual, and turn to a new basis in politics, especially for Benjamin. The possibilities for
 
'''page4'''<br>
A radical change in the nature of art implies that our very ways of seeing the world have also changed. Through montage film achieves the changes of place and focus which periodically assail the spectator, which strongly testifies to this new form of machine-age-perception.
 
'''page5'''<br>
Mechanical reproduction involves the appropriation of an original. The violent reordering of the physical world and its meanings provides the shock effects to terms with the age of mechanical reproduction.  
The process of adopting new ways of seeing that consequently propose new forms of social organisation

Revision as of 13:50, 14 February 2015

 The Work of Culture in the Age of Cybernetic Systems


Intro
Benjamin’s text published in 1936, when film was still young; while Nichol’s was published in 1988, when video games and other simulation media were young. Within this text, Nichol will discuss this shift from fetishisation of the object to fetishisation of the process of interaction, of simulation. With some examples of simulation to video games and genetic engineering, it reveals ideology becomes more clearly a subject.

page2
Cybernetic systems include an entire array of machines and apparatuses that exhibit computational power., which all exhibit a capacity to process information and execute actions. The computer is an icon and a metaphor symbolising the entire spectrum of networks, systems and devices. With in the article Nichol contrast characteristics of cybernetic systems with those of mechanical reproduction and establish a central metaphor to help to understand these cybernetic systems, and prompt the question that how this metaphor acquires the force of the real. The work of culture will be discussed in focus

page3
What at the heart of the change in mechanical reproduction that effects the work of art is the impossibility of reproducing its authenticity. However, it emancipates art from its parasitical dependence on ritual, and turn to a new basis in politics, which are held in check by the economic system surrounding the means of mechanical reproduction.

page4
A radical change in the nature of art implies that our very ways of seeing the world have also changed. Through montage film achieves the changes of place and focus which periodically assail the spectator, which strongly testifies to this new form of machine-age-perception.

page5
Mechanical reproduction involves the appropriation of an original. The violent reordering of the physical world and its meanings provides the shock effects to terms with the age of mechanical reproduction. The process of adopting new ways of seeing that consequently propose new forms of social organisation