Literary Crisis in the Age of Film and Television: Starting from Postcolonial
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.62051/ijsspa.v4n2.45Keywords:
Film and Television Era, Literature Flow, Post-colonialismAbstract
From the macro perspective of post-colonial, this paper explores the modern crisis of traditional literature in the era of film and television in which technology carnival and traffic are Paramount, and points out that literature will not die out in the era of technology, but will be accompanied by mass media towards consumerization and popularization.
Downloads
References
[1] Bell, D. (1972). The cultural contradictions of capitalism. Journal of Aesthetic Education, 6(1/2): 11-38.
[2] Heidegger, M. (2002). Heidegger: Off the beaten track. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
[3] Baudrillard, J. (2018). On consumer society. In: James, D. (Eds.), Rethinking the Subject. Routledge, London. pp. 193-203.
[4] Huger, R. (1988). The Power of Images. Sichuan Fine Arts Publishing House, Chengdu.
[5] Said, E. W. (2012). Culture and imperialism. Vintage, New York.
[6] Benjamin, W. (2018). The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction. In: Watson, S., Barnes, A.J., Bunning, K. (Eds.), A museum studies approach to heritage. Routledge, London. pp. 226-243.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.







