The Clockwork Penguin

Daniel Binns is a media theorist and filmmaker tinkering with the weird edges of technology, storytelling, and screen culture. He is the author of Material Media-Making in the Digital Age and currently writes about posthuman poetics, glitchy machines, and speculative media worlds.

Tag: speed

  • Speed and politics

    Need for Speed (d. Scott Waugh, 2015).
    Need for Speed (d. Scott Waugh, 2015).

    Cinema is movement. Movement is change. Change is politics — politics regulates change.

    Movement in the frame is thus political.

    The addition of speed amplifies the political impetus of cinema. Movement is cinema.

    * * *

    [It’s okay, I haven’t lost it. These are perfunctory scribblings for upcoming research, that I thought were strangely poetic. Rough thoughts on the disappointingly not-that-disappointing Need for Speed here.]

Her language contains elements from Aeolic vernacular and poetic tradition, with traces of epic vocabulary familiar to readers of Homer. She has the ability to judge critically her own ecstasies and grief, and her emotions lose nothing of their force by being recollected in tranquillity.

Marble statue of Sappho on side profile.

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