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DVD,
Video and Reaching Audiences: Experiments in Moving Image
Distribution
Forthcoming in Convergence: The International
Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 13.1
(February 2007).
Abstract:
The advent
of the Internet (as a means of marketing and selling) and
DVD (as a delivery medium) has revitalised interest in selling/delivering
'alternative' moving image work direct to the public. The
potential these avenues offer for reaching wider audiences
are proving particularly attractive in the light of the recent
UNESCO Convention on Cultural Diversity. However, similar
initiatives were undertaken when VHS took off as a mass delivery
medium in the 1980s. This article examines some of the attempts
to embrace the video sell-through market in the UK in the
1980s and 1990s as a way of getting artists'/independent moving
image work to a wider public. However, these attempts met
with mixed results. The reasons for this are discussed, and
the article concludes that while digital technology has in
some ways made it easier to reach audiences, there are important
lessons to be learned from its video precursor, if the potential
of DVD and the Internet is to be maximised.
Julia
Knight
Reader and Lead Researcher on the AHRC funded project 'Databasing
Key Documents and Narrative Chronologies of Artists' Film
and Video Distributors in the UK', University of Sunderland
julia.knight@sunderland.ac.uk
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