Papers by Anneroos Goosen
A vlog is a personal video diary in which the vlogger addresses an online audience. This master t... more A vlog is a personal video diary in which the vlogger addresses an online audience. This master thesis deals with the vlogger’s discourse in order to understand what it means to express an embodied self in an online environment. It presents theoretical frameworks to analyze the act of vlogging and offers case studies to explore these practices.
The practice of vlogging transcends domains that we have traditionally learned to keep apart, such as private and public, real and fake, self and other, body and virtuality. This thesis argues that vlogging is a transboundary practice in which vloggers easily cross the rigid borders between domains that have traditionally been kept apart. It creates new relations between ourselves and the world around us, causing us to rethink our ideas about identity and ourselves. The vlogger’s discourse is a new domain in which hybrid bodies emerge that are able to find new unities within these transboundary practices.
This paper focuses on the work of Richard Prince in the context of the Pictures Generation. The m... more This paper focuses on the work of Richard Prince in the context of the Pictures Generation. The main focus is on Prince’s position within conceptual photography and his use of (re)photography and appropriation.
A reading of Gus van Sant's remake of Hitchcock's classic Psycho, using Gilles Deleuzes concept o... more A reading of Gus van Sant's remake of Hitchcock's classic Psycho, using Gilles Deleuzes concept of the crystal image.
Uploads
Papers by Anneroos Goosen
The practice of vlogging transcends domains that we have traditionally learned to keep apart, such as private and public, real and fake, self and other, body and virtuality. This thesis argues that vlogging is a transboundary practice in which vloggers easily cross the rigid borders between domains that have traditionally been kept apart. It creates new relations between ourselves and the world around us, causing us to rethink our ideas about identity and ourselves. The vlogger’s discourse is a new domain in which hybrid bodies emerge that are able to find new unities within these transboundary practices.
The practice of vlogging transcends domains that we have traditionally learned to keep apart, such as private and public, real and fake, self and other, body and virtuality. This thesis argues that vlogging is a transboundary practice in which vloggers easily cross the rigid borders between domains that have traditionally been kept apart. It creates new relations between ourselves and the world around us, causing us to rethink our ideas about identity and ourselves. The vlogger’s discourse is a new domain in which hybrid bodies emerge that are able to find new unities within these transboundary practices.