Moving image culture seems to privilege the instantly identifiable: the
recognizable face, the well-timed stunt, the perfectly synchronized line
of dialogue. Yet perfect, in-focus visibility does not come 'naturally'
to the moving image, and if there is one visual effect the eye of the
camera can record better than the human eye it is blur. Looking beyond
popular media to works of experimental cinema and video art, this
groundbreaking collection addresses the aesthetics and politics of
moving images in states of decay, distortion, indistinctness and
fragmentation. A range of international scholars examines what is at
stake in these images' sometimes radical foregrounding of materiality
and mediation, or of evanescence and spectrality, as well as their
challenging of the dominant position accorded to 'legible' images. How
have artists and filmmakers rendered the 'indefinite' image, and what
questions does it pose? With a range of approaches, from aesthetics to
phenomenology to production studies, the authors in this volume
investigate techniques, themes and concepts that emerge from this wilful
excavation of the moving image's material base.