Photographed by the Earth: War and media in light of nuclear events

This article charts a media historical relation between radiation and celluloid film, ranging from the downwind 1956 production of The Conqueror to early scientific imaging practices, war photography, war documentaries, military industrial film, and contemporary artists working on radiation aestheti...

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Main Author: Thomas Pringle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Amsterdam University Press 2014-01-01
Series:NECSUS : European journal of media studies
Online Access:https://www.necsus-ejms.org/test/photographed-earth-war-media-light-nuclear-events/
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spelling doaj-407e1ab3dd5c43ba88d8ffb4b22cdc4b2020-11-25T03:50:46ZengAmsterdam University PressNECSUS : European journal of media studies2213-02172014-01-013213115410.5117/NECSUS2014.2.PRINPhotographed by the Earth: War and media in light of nuclear eventsThomas PringleThis article charts a media historical relation between radiation and celluloid film, ranging from the downwind 1956 production of The Conqueror to early scientific imaging practices, war photography, war documentaries, military industrial film, and contemporary artists working on radiation aesthetics. Posing the collection as a diagnostic media ecology, this article argues that the valuable evidence provided by the environmental metadata stored in celluloid film is the product of ecological warfare and violence. By turning to the material sciences for a better understanding of how nuclear weapons affect media on large spatial and temporal scales we gain a parallax view to how photographic practices – defined as the aesthetic exchange of light and energy – occur autonomously within our ecology, although some of these forces are mobilised in deadly and imperceptible ways. By demonstrating that non-human agencies released by Cold War energy policies have contaminated military industrial and commercial film archives alike, this article asserts that nuclear testing and warfare have contributed to a global condition of test-subjectivity that can be evidenced by diagnostic media ecology.https://www.necsus-ejms.org/test/photographed-earth-war-media-light-nuclear-events/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Pringle
spellingShingle Thomas Pringle
Photographed by the Earth: War and media in light of nuclear events
NECSUS : European journal of media studies
author_facet Thomas Pringle
author_sort Thomas Pringle
title Photographed by the Earth: War and media in light of nuclear events
title_short Photographed by the Earth: War and media in light of nuclear events
title_full Photographed by the Earth: War and media in light of nuclear events
title_fullStr Photographed by the Earth: War and media in light of nuclear events
title_full_unstemmed Photographed by the Earth: War and media in light of nuclear events
title_sort photographed by the earth: war and media in light of nuclear events
publisher Amsterdam University Press
series NECSUS : European journal of media studies
issn 2213-0217
publishDate 2014-01-01
description This article charts a media historical relation between radiation and celluloid film, ranging from the downwind 1956 production of The Conqueror to early scientific imaging practices, war photography, war documentaries, military industrial film, and contemporary artists working on radiation aesthetics. Posing the collection as a diagnostic media ecology, this article argues that the valuable evidence provided by the environmental metadata stored in celluloid film is the product of ecological warfare and violence. By turning to the material sciences for a better understanding of how nuclear weapons affect media on large spatial and temporal scales we gain a parallax view to how photographic practices – defined as the aesthetic exchange of light and energy – occur autonomously within our ecology, although some of these forces are mobilised in deadly and imperceptible ways. By demonstrating that non-human agencies released by Cold War energy policies have contaminated military industrial and commercial film archives alike, this article asserts that nuclear testing and warfare have contributed to a global condition of test-subjectivity that can be evidenced by diagnostic media ecology.
url https://www.necsus-ejms.org/test/photographed-earth-war-media-light-nuclear-events/
work_keys_str_mv AT thomaspringle photographedbytheearthwarandmediainlightofnuclearevents
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