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Erscheint vorauss. 31. März 2026
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This book argues that contemporary digital blockbusters function as laboratories for posthuman cognition that transform spectatorship into a cyborg mode in which perception, memory, and agency are distributed across the cinematic canvas, the diegetic bodies of characters, the formal operations of film style, and the embodied cognition of the spectator. Drawing on posthumanist theory and the framework of 4E cognition, it introduces four interlinked concepts - embodied and frozen module cognition , amalgamated aesthetics, and the cybokinetic frame - to explain how film form trains attention,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book argues that contemporary digital blockbusters function as laboratories for posthuman cognition that transform spectatorship into a cyborg mode in which perception, memory, and agency are distributed across the cinematic canvas, the diegetic bodies of characters, the formal operations of film style, and the embodied cognition of the spectator. Drawing on posthumanist theory and the framework of 4E cognition, it introduces four interlinked concepts - embodied and frozen module cognition , amalgamated aesthetics, and the cybokinetic frame - to explain how film form trains attention, sensorimotor coupling, and cognitive adaptation. Methodologically, the study combines close textual analysis with attention and perception research, incorporating formal measures (ASL, MSL, VAI) and advocating for experimental follow-ups using eye-tracking, pupillometry, and fMRI/EEG studies. Through case studies including Blonde, Nope, Inception, RoboCop, Pacific Rim, and Iron Man, the book traces how aesthetic strategies sustain or fracture embodied engagement under conditions of sensory and informational excess. Ultimately, it redefines the digital blockbuster as an active cognitive technology that both reflects and reconfigures twenty-first-century perception. The book is aimed at film and media scholars, cognitive scientists exploring neurocinematics and enactive approaches, advanced students, and filmmakers who seek guidance on visual design.
Autorenporträt
Anna Batori is an independent researcher with a PhD in Film and Television Studies (University of Glasgow/Screen, UK, 2017). She is the author of Space and Place in Romanian and Hungarian Cinema (2018) and Extreme Cinema in Eastern Europe (2024). Batori writes on world cinema, film theory and digitized narrative techniques.