Performative Images draws upon the work of video artists and activists in France between the 1970s and the early 2020s and focuses on significant practices with technology. Video art and video activism are analysed together in the book to revaluate key concepts in media studies and foreground a performative approach to the theory of image technology. The book engages works in visual culture, performance studies, digital studies, critical race theory, and feminist methodologies to account for the changes brought about by video technology in social and psychic life. Performative Images is about art and activists’ engagement in video technology—an engagement that unsettles the hegemonic narrative of dominant media, as well as the apparently politically neutral dimension of communication technology. In this book, the author explores how video-image technology shapes our psychic and social environments from an art historiographical perspective. We know media technology is dramatically shaping our political and epistemological landscape: this book foregrounds the emergence of performative video images as a key factor in the revaluation of culture and politics.
- Cover
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Video: Between Technology and Performance
- 1. Volume-Image of Video Technology
- 2. Zones of Modulation: Video as a Space-Critical Medium
- 3. Programmed Life and Racialized Technesis
- 4. Video and the Technological Milieu of Desire
- Conclusion
- Performative Images as Objects of Philosophical Inquiry
- Artworks Cited
- Acknowledgements
- Index