Multimodal analysis and digital technology

The aim of this chapter is to explore directions for advancing multimodal analysis through the use of digital technology which is the research agenda currently underway in the Multimodal Analysis Lab, Interactive & Digital Media Institute (IDMI) at the National University of Singapore. Historica...

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Main Author: O'Halloran, Kay
Other Authors: Montagna, E.
Format: Book Chapter
Published: IBIS Editions 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/49071
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author O'Halloran, Kay
author2 Montagna, E.
author_facet Montagna, E.
O'Halloran, Kay
author_sort O'Halloran, Kay
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The aim of this chapter is to explore directions for advancing multimodal analysis through the use of digital technology which is the research agenda currently underway in the Multimodal Analysis Lab, Interactive & Digital Media Institute (IDMI) at the National University of Singapore. Historically, the impact of technology on knowledge is evident from the introduction of the printing press in the late fifteenth century (Eisenstein, 1979). Today, 'computerization turns media into computer data" (Manovich, 2001: 45). The recursive nature of the computerisation process, where 'images scater into data, data gathers into images' (Galison, 2002: 322) permits the visual display of data flow which is experienced over time, '[be it in science, statistics, archiecture, design, digital art, or any combination of these' (Pau, 2003: 175). There are few constants in the digital environment where everyhing is variable and open to manipulation and recontextualisation. However, does digital technology function to reproduce more effectively and efficiently knowledge which already exists, or does it produce new theories and approaches? How does digital technology function to constrain knowledge? What are the implications for multimodal analysis? In what follows, these questions are explored. The theoretical basis for the discussion is Michael Halliday's social semiotic theory (Halliday, 1978, 1994 [1985]; Halliday, Matthiessen, 200).
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-490712017-09-12T04:05:22Z Multimodal analysis and digital technology O'Halloran, Kay Montagna, E. The aim of this chapter is to explore directions for advancing multimodal analysis through the use of digital technology which is the research agenda currently underway in the Multimodal Analysis Lab, Interactive & Digital Media Institute (IDMI) at the National University of Singapore. Historically, the impact of technology on knowledge is evident from the introduction of the printing press in the late fifteenth century (Eisenstein, 1979). Today, 'computerization turns media into computer data" (Manovich, 2001: 45). The recursive nature of the computerisation process, where 'images scater into data, data gathers into images' (Galison, 2002: 322) permits the visual display of data flow which is experienced over time, '[be it in science, statistics, archiecture, design, digital art, or any combination of these' (Pau, 2003: 175). There are few constants in the digital environment where everyhing is variable and open to manipulation and recontextualisation. However, does digital technology function to reproduce more effectively and efficiently knowledge which already exists, or does it produce new theories and approaches? How does digital technology function to constrain knowledge? What are the implications for multimodal analysis? In what follows, these questions are explored. The theoretical basis for the discussion is Michael Halliday's social semiotic theory (Halliday, 1978, 1994 [1985]; Halliday, Matthiessen, 200). 2013 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/49071 IBIS Editions restricted
spellingShingle O'Halloran, Kay
Multimodal analysis and digital technology
title Multimodal analysis and digital technology
title_full Multimodal analysis and digital technology
title_fullStr Multimodal analysis and digital technology
title_full_unstemmed Multimodal analysis and digital technology
title_short Multimodal analysis and digital technology
title_sort multimodal analysis and digital technology
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/49071