Today, our environment is dominated by the visual. This book explores "visual intelligence" as a basic and indispensable tool of cultural survival. The author offers a practical manual on a non-superficial level for those who seriously want to know how images are processed, how they function in relation to our innermost beings, and how they form the psychological fabric of our political, social, and economic environment. Barry defines how we derive meaning from images and examines perceptual process, how it has evolved, and the role it plays in our thinking. She critically examines the concept of rationality and explores how visual logic works to create meaning. The book goes behind the obvious and beyond the superficial as it critically examines the visual power and logic of images, cutting across a variety of areas: perceptual psychology, art, television, film, literature, advertising, and politics.
The second section of Visual Intelligence examines the role which various media play in creating the images which impact our lives: how visual images create a language with profound psychological meaning, and how print, television, and film media manipulate images to create desired emotional effects. Close-ups explore visual subtleties in such areas as digital manipulation, camera attitudes, and contextual framing, as well as the social consequences of "image" as an abstract concept expressed in concrete visual terms. Part III looks critically at the most controversial areas of image persuasiveness today—advertising, politics, and entertainment.
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
I. Perceiving Images
1. Perception and Visual "Common Sense"
Evolution, Emotion, and Subliminal Perception • Fallacies of Rationality • Perceptual Illusion • Remnants of Former Perceptual "Truths" • Neurology of Perception • Holistic versus Analytical Perceptual Views • Gestalt Roots • From Phi to AM • Event Perception, Media, and Logic • Perceptual Principles and Artistic Manipulation • Multisensory Surrounds and Virtual • Reality • Brain Wiring • Conclusion
2. The Nature and Power of Images
Defining the Image • Primal Invariance: Cave Art to Comics • Image Affordance • Inner Necessity • Mental Imagery • Metaphors of Mind • Eiconics • Conclusion
II. Mediated Images
3.The Language of Images
Language • Comics and Hieroglyphics • Proxemics • Deep Structure • Semiotics • Literary Imagery: Breaking through Words • Color • Light, Grain, Angle and Size • Conclusion
Close Up: Manipulating Public Images in the Age of Digitalization: J.F.K. Marries Marilyn; O.J. Metamorphoses from Black to White
4.Video's Moving Images
Video Experience and the Nature of the Image • Low and High Definition • The O.J. Phenomenon • Sensation, Information, and Dreams • Manipulating TV Images
Close Up: Manipulating Public Image through Television Image: "Teddy"
5.Film Logic and Rhetoric
Perception and the Development of Montage • Film Origins • Editing and Perceptual Process • Kuleshov Workshop • Pudovkin: Linkage Montage • Eisenstein: Dialectical Montage • From Long Take to CG • Sound and Mental Imagery • Hollywood Style and Linear Narrative • Color Comes to Black and White • 2-D to 3-D • SFX • The Third Phase • Conclusion
Close Up: Tailhook "Top Guns": Living Up to the Image
III. Controversial Images
6. Advertising Images: Seduction, Shock, and the Unwary
Ads as Gestalts • Tension and Closure • The Big Idea • Embeds and Subliminal Advertising • Advertising and Color • The Sex-Sell: Women's Bodies and Normative Images • The Sex-Sell: Men and Their Machines • Joe Camel and the Marlboro Man: Images That Kill • Conclusion
7. Political Images: Public Relations, Advertising, and Propaganda
Hill and Knowlton's PR War Effort • Political Advertising and Public Image • Images of Hitler • Image and Group Psychology • Conclusion
8. Media Images and Violence
Physical Causes of Violence • Desensitivity • Attitudinal Studies and Image: Mean World Consequences • How Violent Is TV? • Imitative Violence • Long Term Studies • The New Violence • The Public Trust • Video Games • Conclusion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Voir