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研究生: 馬文漪
Wen-Yi Ma
論文名稱:
Body, Image and the Visaul Technology: Disappearance of the Human Body in Cinematic Representations
指導教授: 李振亞
Chenya Li
林文淇
Wenchi Lin
口試委員:
學位類別: 碩士
Master
系所名稱: 文學院 - 英美語文學系
Department of English
畢業學年度: 92
語文別: 英文
論文頁數: 110
外文關鍵詞: visual image, prosthesis, visual technology, human body, robot, cyborg
相關次數: 點閱:12下載:0
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  • Abstract
    This thesis traces the process of an ongoing trivialization of human bodies in
    (post-)modern societies from the perspective of cinematic representations. From
    mechanical to cybernetic prostheses of human bodies, there is a growing tendency to
    prosthesize the surfaces of bodies. The sophistication of visual technologies has
    marginalized physicality and invested human bodies with optical illusions. Being
    ambushed with visual images, postmodern culture has been limited to a fixed gaze
    and formulated into a series of visual spectacles.
    Accordingly, in the first chapter, I am going to examine how the transformation
    of ontological status of human flesh has taken place in fin-de-siecle France by means
    of newly invented cinematic technologies. In the second chapter, I am going to
    explore how the transcendent power of cinematography is able to immortalize
    physical bodies in a modern way and construct a perfect body without organs of
    commodities. The splendid visual media are capable of interpenetrating the viewer
    and mechanized images, reality and representation. The capitalist’s visual culture
    has constructed a detached sphere which is apart from our living reality, and yet,
    paradoxically, interchangeable with our material world. The third chapter accounts
    for pure exposure of human bodies in the representations of cyborg figures. The
    fourth chapter is organized around several sections of discussions about the virtual
    body in hyperreality. This chapter offers a critique of Andy and Larry Wachowski’s
    film, The Matrix, to illustrate how a computer-generated world, a more-real-than-real
    virtuality, has totally taken over the real world in which human bodies become slaves
    of the digital media. Moreover, with VR prostheses, the rapid proliferation of virtual
    space has made possible the ultimate transcendence of physical reality.

    Abstract i Acknowledgements iii Introduction 1 Chapter I: Mechanical Prostheses of the Body in Early Cinema 7 Chapter II: The Transcendent Power of Cinematography 27 Chapter III: Body as Machines 46 Chapter IV: The Virtual Body – Cybernetic Prostheses of the Body Presented in Matrix 65 Bibliography 101

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