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Animating Space

From Mickey to Wall-E

by

Type
Essays
Subject
Genre
Keywords
animation, United States, theory
Publishing date
Publisher
University Press of Kentucky
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover296 pages
6 ½ x 9 ½ inches (16.5 x 24 cm)
ISBN
978-0-8131-2586-2
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Book Presentation:
Animators work within a strictly defined, limited space that requires difficult artistic decisions. The blank frame presents a dilemma for all animators, and the decision of what to include and leave out raises important questions about artistry, authorship, and cultural influence. In Animating Space: From Mickey to WALL-E, renowned scholar J. P. Telotte explores how animation has confronted the blank template, and how responses to that confrontation have changed. Focusing on American animation, Telotte tracks the development of animation in line with changing cultural attitudes toward space and examines innovations that elevated the medium from a novelty to a fully realized art form. From Winsor McCay and the Fleischer brothers to the Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros., and Pixar Studios, Animating Space explores the contributions of those who invented animation, those who refined it, and those who, in the current digital age, are using it to redefine the very possibilities of cinema.

About the Author:
J. P. Telotte, professor of literature, communication, and culture at the Georgia Institute of Technology, is the author of Disney TV. He lives in Atlanta, Georgia.

Press Reviews:
"J.P. Telotte's excellent new collection of essays by a variety of scholars... explores the complex relationship between sf and television across the twentieth century into out own millennium."—Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts

"Enthusiastically attempts the impossible— discussing the importance of 'space' in animation, from the physical to the philosophical... and succeeds marvelously, [providing] a means for exploring how animation has reflected society's views on what is and is not permitted when it comes to films showing us versions of our own realities."—Raintaxi Online

"His timely book is both a historical study of animation and a means of giving theoretical grounding to it as a product of a cultural industry that has its roots in teh late 19th Century and has morphed... its way into the second decade of the 21st. It is also an excellent and entertaining read."—The Midewest Book Review

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