"Part One: The Audience and the Myth of Entertainment"
In the first part of the book, Youngblood attempts to show how ''expanded cinema'' will unite art and life. "Television's elaborate movie-like subjective-camera ''simulation'' of the first moon landing" (p46) showed a generation that reality was not as real as simulation. He says that he is writing "at the end of the era of cinema as we've known it, the beginning of an era of image-exchange between man and man" (p. 49). The ''The intermedia network has made all of us artists by proxy. A decade of television-watching is equal to a comprehensive course in dramatic acting, writing, and filming...the mystique is gone—we could almost do it ourselves. Unfortunately too many of us do just that: hence the glut of sub-mediocre talent in the entertainment industry. :— p. 58This is what forces cinema to expand and become more complex. Mass media entertainment dulls people's minds. It is a closed,
"Part Two: Synaesthetic Cinema: The End of Drama"
Youngblood describes television as the"Part Three: Toward Cosmic Consciousness"
Youngblood analyses ''2001: A Space Odyssey'' to explore the "electronic age"Part Four: Cybernetic Cinema and Computer Films"
Youngblood defines the ''technosphere'' as a symbiosis between man and machine. The computer liberates man from specialization and amplifies intelligence (pp. 180–182). He draws comparisons between computer processing and human neural processing (pp. 183–184). Logic and intelligence is the brain's software. He predicts that computer software will become more important than hardware and that in the future super-computers will design ever more advanced computers (pp. 185–188). His vision of the future is the ''Aesthetic Machine'': "Aesthetic application of technology is the only means of achieving new consciousness to match our environment" (p189). Creativity will be shared between man and machine. He points to the links between"Part Five: Television as a Creative Medium"
Youngblood describes the ''videosphere'', in which computers and televisions are extensions to man's central nervous system. He is optimistic about technological advances and predicts TV-on-demand by 1978 (pp. 260–264). He does acknowledge, however, that data retrieval is more complicated than data recording. The various processes involved in video synthesizing are described: de-beaming, keying, chroma-keying,"Part Six: Intermedia"
Youngblood sees the artist as an ecologist, involved with the environment rather than with objects (pp. 346–351). By way of example he cites the video displays at world expositions (specifically"Part Seven: Holographic Cinema: A New World"
Finally, Youngblood explores the creative potential ofKey ideas
*References
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