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Image Objects: An Archaeology of Computer Graphics

Image Objects: An Archaeology of Computer Graphics

Current price: $35.00
Publication Date: August 3rd, 2021
Publisher:
The MIT Press
ISBN:
9780262045032
Pages:
312
Special Order - Subject to Availability

Description

How computer graphics transformed the computer from a calculating machine into an interactive medium, as seen through the histories of five technical objects.

Most of us think of computer graphics as a relatively recent invention, enabling the spectacular visual effects and lifelike simulations we see in current films, television shows, and digital games. In fact, computer graphics have been around as long as the modern computer itself, and played a fundamental role in the development of our contemporary culture of computing. In Image Objects, Jacob Gaboury offers a prehistory of computer graphics through an examination of five technical objects--an algorithm, an interface, an object standard, a programming paradigm, and a hardware platform--arguing that computer graphics transformed the computer from a calculating machine into an interactive medium.

Gaboury explores early efforts to produce an algorithmic solution for the calculation of object visibility; considers the history of the computer screen and the random-access memory that first made interactive images possible; examines the standardization of graphical objects through the Utah teapot, the most famous graphical model in the history of the field; reviews the graphical origins of the object-oriented programming paradigm; and, finally, considers the development of the graphics processing unit as the catalyst that enabled an explosion in graphical computing at the end of the twentieth century.
 
The development of computer graphics, Gaboury argues, signals a change not only in the way we make images but also in the way we mediate our world through the computer--and how we have come to reimagine that world as computational.

About the Author

Jacob Gaboury is Assistant Professor of Film and Media at the University of California, Berkeley.

Praise for Image Objects: An Archaeology of Computer Graphics

“Remarkably elegant... Weav[es] together both biography and technical history, archival research and media theory.”
Film Quarterly

“A welcome addition to other recent texts in the growing canon of archaeological approaches to computer hardware and software.”
—Andrew Reinhard, Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York University

“A unique interrogation of the contemporary optical regime, structured as it is by black boxes and screens.”
—Michael Eby, ArtForum