ABSTRACT

When this book was originally published in 1976, video represented a new instrument, a new medium, and a new field of research with largely unrealized potential. The video-taperecorder was an addition to the technology of mass communications, a handy gadget for recording synchronized images and sound on magnetic tapes for storage or simultaneous playback. But the authors of this study look at it as also mirror, relay and catalyst, offering creative possibilities of exploration and criticism, of active analysis and transformation, of self-discovery and communication. They discern a liberating potential of video an antidote to the dominance of centralized TV in consumer society and ultimately a means towards the progressive social reappropriation of the media of communication.

The authors draw on their experience working with school-children, teenagers, and a variety of cultural, political and community groups to illustrate the versatility of video in approaching diverse situations of everyday life, whether from the viewpoint of ‘cultural animation’, sociological research, or a surrealistic game. These projects, and interviews with other practitioners, present here the basis for a first typology of styles and approaches in using video, and for a ‘videology’: a language, a set of concepts, and a theory comprehending process and praxis, image and action. This is a fascinating snapshot now, looking back at these early ideas.

part 1|36 pages

The Use of Video in Cultural Animation

chapter 1|11 pages

Towards Collective Writing

chapter 2|6 pages

VT-TV in a Block of Flats

Maine-Montparnasse

chapter 3|7 pages

A Local Video Newsreel

Bourges

chapter 4|8 pages

Regional Video

St Cyprien

part 2|75 pages

Films of Utopia and Utopias of Film

chapter 5|13 pages

Waiters

Migration from the role?

chapter 6|9 pages

Women

Political migrations

chapter 7|13 pages

Schoolchildren

Immigration of the Trojan horse

chapter 8|10 pages

Young People

Hesitant migrations

chapter 9|8 pages

Marginal People

Emigration by immersion

chapter 10|6 pages

Televiewers

Immersion in the flood of images

chapter 11|8 pages

Militants and TV

Censored emergence

chapter 12|6 pages

Steelworkers

Emergence of a potential

part 3|39 pages

Process

chapter 13|14 pages

Videologists

Some other practitioners

chapter 14|23 pages

Videology