范·列文虎克-电影:在荷兰科学电影中重塑记忆1925-c.1960。

IF 0.7 1区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Mieneke Te Hennepe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文考察了电影安东尼·范·列文虎克(1924)的制作、内容和接受对科学历史框架的影响。这部电影以荷兰先驱电影制作人Jan Cornelis Mol(1891-1954)的微电影摄影为特色,是通过早期视觉重建来纪念17世纪显微镜和细菌学的动态过程的一部分,这是一种利用科学物质遗产的新方式,以及让观众能够像荷兰科学家安东尼·范·列文虎克(1632-1723)自己观察微观生物一样观察微观生物的世界。关于物质文化的知识转移,围绕着历史和当代仪器,是这部电影中应用的显微摄影实践的决定因素。这部电影的制作和体验也反映了17世纪的实验过程,玩弄光学,想象一个全新的未知世界。与20世纪20年代的其他传记科学电影不同,安东尼·范·列文虎克对时间和运动进行了抽象描述,使观众能够将科学史与显微摄影术联系起来,从而有助于记忆范·列文虎克的作品,将其视为这一过程中细菌学的起源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Van Leeuwenhoek - the film: remaking memory in Dutch science cinema 1925-c.1960.

This paper examines how the production, content and reception of the film Antony van Leeuwenhoek (1924) influenced the historical framing of science. The film features microcinematography by the pioneering Dutch filmmaker Jan Cornelis Mol (1891-1954), and was part of a dynamic process of commemorating seventeenth-century microscopy and bacteriology through an early instance of visual re-creation - a new way of using scientific material heritage, and of enabling audiences to supposedly observe the world of microscopic organisms in just the same way as the Dutch scientist Antoni van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723) had observed them for himself. Knowledge transfer concerning material culture, around both historical and contemporary instruments, was the determining factor in the microcinematography practices applied in this film. The production and experience of the film also mirrored the seventeenth-century process of experimentation, playing with optics, and visualizing an entirely new and unknown world. Unlike other biographical science films of the 1920s, Antony van Leeuwenhoek featured abstract depictions of time and movement that allowed the audience to connect the history of science with microcinematography, contributing to the memory of Van Leeuwenhoek's work as the origins of bacteriology in the process.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
59
期刊介绍: This leading international journal publishes scholarly papers and review articles on all aspects of the history of science. History of science is interpreted widely to include medicine, technology and social studies of science. BJHS papers make important and lively contributions to scholarship and the journal has been an essential library resource for more than thirty years. It is also used extensively by historians and scholars in related fields. A substantial book review section is a central feature. There are four issues a year, comprising an annual volume of over 600 pages. Published for the British Society for the History of Science
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