Remix Theory » Archivio » WHAT COMES AFTER REMIX? by Lev Manovich - 0 views
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officially accepted
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Jill Walker Rettberg on 10 Sep 09Hm, that doesn't seem to fit with Lessig and others' arguments about the music industry suing people who use remix?
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I think that “remixing” is a better term anyway because it suggests a systematic re-working of a source, the meaning which “appropriation” does not have
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The other older term commonly used across media is “quoting” but I see it as describing a very different logic than remixing. If remixing implies systematically rearranging the whole text, quoting refers inserting some fragments from old text(s) into the new one.
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we can say that if modernist collage always involved a “clash” of element, electronic and software collage also allows for “blend.
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In his book DJ Culture Ulf Poschardt singles out different stages in the evolution of remixing practice
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Around the turn of the century (20tth to 21st) people started to apply the term “remix” to other media besides music: visual projects, software, literary texts