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Laconia: 1,200 Tweets on Film Paperback – May 16, 2011

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 197 pages
  • Publisher: Zero Books (May 16, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1846946085
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846946080
  • Product Dimensions: 5.6 x 0.5 x 8.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,418,468 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful By Meg Sumner TOP 1000 REVIEWERVINE VOICE on May 31, 2011
Format: Paperback
Twitter is mindless messaging, right? As author Masha Tupitsyn shows, Twitter has created a concise and relevant snapshot of modern society. The nature of Twitter requires succinctness, something not often found in media. While several books have been published now about the astonishing success of Twitter, only Laconia goes into the study of film through tweets.

How is that possible? First, the author has written about film before...she has another book called Life as We Show It that fascinated me with the way it analyzed the reactions to film by a variety of viewers. Movies are created to entertain-the message they send is put out there, but it's up to viewers to process it and decide how they will react. Success depends on the reaction, at times more than the film itself.

So, given her background, she sorted through massive bits of Twitter to find the short little remarks made about film, the ones that are stunning in their simplicity and depth.

For example: "Eastern Promises & A History Violence are twin parables:
one film looks at violence from the outside in and the
other from the inside out." The New Yorker magazine would need half a dozen pages to say the same thing.

Another: "If you compare old/shallow Oprah to new/sage Oprah,
you can see that in America depth is a media invention. A
part you can start playing at any point. "

Tupitsyn shows that ordinary people can be brilliant, make educated guesses, or damn fools of themselves. While part of the book shows the silliness of "private" celebrities sharing their most intimate details, she avoids making this all about pop culture-it's about film and media. Be sure to read her introduction, it really helps set the scene for what you read and recognize the importance that is possible in an unexpected place.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful By Elaine Castillo on June 7, 2011
Format: Paperback
Excerpted from a longer review at Big Other: [...]

...to write cultural criticism is necessarily to write back to cultural memory... [LACONIA's] use of the tweet-form dramatizes the kinds of remembering and thinking at stake in contemporary social media and the culture it informs and is informed by. How can we begin today to think about the relationship between virtual memory and cultural memory; between digital memory and embodied memory?

In an interview, the filmmaker Eugene Green said: "In my conception of cinema, it's impossible to make real cinema in digital because it doesn't capture any energy; it just gives an intellectual image of what the director wanted to put in the frame, it is not the reality, the real presence, the spiritual presence of what has been filmed; because in order to capture energy, the energy which is in matter, you need other matter, the matter of film, the chemistry of film which captures that energy. And digital image is a virtual image, there is nothing real there, so there cannot be any real spiritual presence either. Nevertheless, there is a sort of economic pressure to abolish film, to make it impossible to shoot in film."

The argument disdaining the emptiness of digital in favor of the richness of film is by no means a new one, and I have serious reservations about it, mostly to do with the race/gender/class inequalities that dictate who is typically able to use digital and who is able to use film--however, what Green is pointing out here about the crucial difference between the virtual and the material is at the heart of LACONIA.
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Format: Paperback
LACONIA, written entirely on Twitter between April 2009 and June 2010, uses popular culture to create a personal world. It stays focused and intimate; personal albeit public. Tupitsyn seeks to do what seems almost impossible--inhabiting the present moment to its fullest. The book calls to mind Blaise Pascal's Pensées or Simone Weil's Gravity and Grace, fragmented texts or aphorisms that are innately spiritual and political in nature. LACONIA, however, is not so much steeped in religious mysticism as much as it is a demystification of image, celebrities, and consumerism. It is at once diary, film criticism, and cultural collage. Influenced by Roland Barthes' A Lover's Discourse: Fragments and Alfredo Jaar's photography installation, Lament of the Images, Tupitsyn writes in her introduction that Laconia is "a lament of the overproduction of language, a communication overload we're incapable of keeping up with or making sense of." However, Tupitsyn doesn't confine herself to formal restrictions of the 140-character per tweet limit; it's not the point. Instead, LACONIA ebbs and flows, often incorporating quotes from films and various cultural theorists and threading them into a larger cultural fabric. Each statement is executed with precision, while revealing a personal intimacy and at times, deep sadness in her mode of thought.
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