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Antonio Somaini

    After earning degrees in Philosophy from the Universities of Milan and Florence, this author is currently a researcher and holds an associate professor qualification at IUAV University of Venice, teaching visual culture and theories of montage. They co-coordinate the LISaV research center (International Laboratory of Semiotics in Venice) at IUAV and are part of the faculty for the PhD in Arts, Performance, and Multimedia Technologies at the University of Genoa. Their academic contributions extend globally, with courses and seminars delivered at prominent institutions across Europe and the United States, including Sorbonne Nouvelle University in Paris and Columbia University in New York.

    Time Machine
    • How cinema and video have transformed our perception of time The year 1895 saw two events, from which Time Machine: Cinematic Temporalitiestakes its bearings: the publication of H.G. Wells' "scientific romance" The Time Machine: An Invention, the first literary work in which movement through time is made possible by technology; and the first public presentation, on the evening of December 28, 1895, of the Lumière Brothers' Cinématographe. Based on these two moments, Time Machineshows how cinema, video and video installations have transformed our perception of time through techniques of slow motion and acceleration, loops and reversals, time-lapse and freeze-frame, multiple exposure and stop-motion animation, as well as through montage: that crucial act of separating and joining images and sounds which has often been considered as one of cinema's defining traits. The 11 texts in this volume shed new light on the aesthetic, epistemological, political and media-theoretical implications of cinematic time manipulation.

      Time Machine