Telephones, Voice Recorders, Microphones, Phonographs: A Media Archaeology of Sonic Technologies in Twin Peaks
Data(s) |
01/06/2016
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Resumo |
This article argues that sonic technologies, such as telephones, voice recorders and phonographs, alongside more (audio)visual ones such as flickering fluorescent lights, videos, and the television sets are crucial to the world of Twin Peaks, and constitute this world as both a communications network with portals to the unknown, and an accumulation of recordings of ghosted voices and entities, perhaps finding its ultimate expression in the backwards reprocessed speech in the Black Lodge. This lodge can be understood as a space in which there are nothing but recordings, albeit now on a cosmic, spiritual and demonic level. Using a media archaeological approach to these devices in the series, this paper will argue that they were already operating by a media archaeological logic, generating the world of Twin Peaks as a haunted archive of sonic and other mediations. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
Goddard, M. (2016) Telephones, Voice Recorders, Microphones, Phonographs: A Media Archaeology of Sonic Technologies in Twin Peaks. Senses of Cinema, 79. ISSN 1443-4059 |
Idioma(s) |
en |
Publicador |
Senses of Cinema Inc. |
Relação |
http://westminsterresearch.wmin.ac.uk/17742/ http://sensesofcinema.com/2016/twin-peaks/sonic-technologies-in-twin-peaks/ |
Palavras-Chave | #Media, Arts and Design |
Tipo |
Article PeerReviewed |