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E-raamat: Towards a Philosophy of Cinematography

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This book presents three interrelated essays about cinematography which offer a theoretical understanding of the ways that film practitioners orchestrate light in today’s post-digital context. Cinematography is a practice at the heart of film production which traditionally involves the control of light and camera technologies to creatively capture moving imagery. During recent years, the widespread adoption of digital processes in cinematography has received a good deal of critical attention from practitioners and scholars alike, however little specific consideration about evolving lighting practices can be found amongst this discourse. Drawing on new-materialist ideas, actor-network theory and the concept of co-creativity, these essays examine the impact of changing production processes for the role and responsibilities of a cinematographer with a specific focus on lighting. Each essay advances a new perspective on the discipline, moving from the notion of light as vision to light as material, from technology as a tool to technology as a network, and from cinematography as an industry to cinematography as a collaborative art.

Introduction 1(8)
The Digital Rupture
4(3)
References
7(2)
Theorising Creative Lighting
9(24)
Experiencing Light
11(5)
Moving Image Materiality
16(7)
Optical Metaphor and Epistemology
23(7)
References
30(3)
Understanding Cinematography Technology
33(24)
Determinism
34(3)
Apparatus
37(3)
Social Constructivism
40(3)
Non-anthropological Vitalism
43(7)
Actor-Network Theory
50(4)
References
54(3)
Exploring Exposure Processes
57(30)
Defining Cinematography
59(5)
Wet Exposure
64(4)
Exposure as Data
68(5)
Virtual Production
73(4)
Aesthetic Leadership
77(5)
References
82(5)
Index 87
Alexander Nevill is a cinematographer, filmmaker and Assistant Professor in the School of Cinema at San Francisco State University, USA.