Technology's Pulse Essays on Rhythm in German Modernism

Technology's Pulse Essays on Rhythm in German Modernism - IGRS Books

Paperback (16 Dec 2011)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Modernity, as has often been observed, was fundamentally concerned with questions of temporality. The period around 1900, in particular, witnessed numerous efforts to define, discipline or 'liberate' temporal experience. Within this broader framework of thinking about temporality, 'rhythm' came to form the object of an intense and widespread preoccupation. Rhythmical research played a central role not only in the reconceptualisation of human physiology and labour in the late nineteenth century, but also in the emergence of a new leisure culture in the early twentieth. The book traces the ways in which notions of 'rhythm' were mobilised both to conceptualise modernity (narrate its origins and prescribe its directions) and, in particular, to forge a new understanding of temporal media that came to mark the mass-mediated experience of the 1920s: a conception of artistic media as mediators between the organic and the rational, the time of the body and that of the machine.
Michael Cowan is Associate Professor of German and World Cinemas at McGill University. He is the author of Cult of the Will: Nervousness and German Modernity (2008), as well as several articles and collections on German literature, film, media and cultural history.

Book information

ISBN: 9780854572304
Publisher: Institute of Modern Languages Research
Imprint: University of London Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 838.91409
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 252
Weight: 362g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 14mm