Download full text
(322.5Kb)
Citation Suggestion
Please use the following Persistent Identifier (PID) to cite this document:
https://doi.org/10.12759/hsr.48.2023.18
Exports for your reference manager
Sleep as Movement/Sleep as Stillness: Colliding "Objects" at the Scientific Exhibition Dreamstage (1977)
Schlaf als Bewegung/Schlaf als Stille: Kollidierende 'Objekte' in der Wissenschaftsausstellung Dreamstage (1977)
[journal article]
Abstract This contribution analyzes the much-acclaimed exhibition Dreamstage, initially presented at the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, in 1977. Based on conceptual papers, private correspondences, press releases and reviews, etc., it will claim that, at the time, dive... view more
This contribution analyzes the much-acclaimed exhibition Dreamstage, initially presented at the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, in 1977. Based on conceptual papers, private correspondences, press releases and reviews, etc., it will claim that, at the time, divergent cultures of knowledge had created divergent objects of "sleep": On the one hand, participating scientists and artists at Dreamstage represented what shall be called "sleep as movement" - by underlining the hidden activities of the sleeping body. Yet, popular cultures regarded sleep as opposing movement - a poetics, that shall be called "sleep as stillness," would frame, or even romanticize, sleep as an act of refusal or pacifistic resistance. In virtue of their constituent logic, both objects were found to collide. Throughout the 20th century, representations of "sleep" and "dreams" were shaped via multiple applications of objectifying/observational, time-based technologies (e.g., Electroencephalography [EEG], Magnetic resonance imaging [MRI], film, or video). This allowed for a circulation between laboratory, cinema, and television, in which knowledge appears to be consolidated again and again. "Sleep as stillness" and "sleep as movement" are thus developed from the case study to better grasp these formations since the late 20th century.... view less
Keywords
sleep; physical exercise; neurosciences; history of science; exhibition; dream; art history; film research; twentieth century
Classification
Philosophy of Science, Theory of Science, Methodology, Ethics of the Social Sciences
Sociology of Knowledge
Free Keywords
Movement; time-based media; sleep research; dream research; representation; contemporary art history; film theory; Spagna, Ted; Hobson, J. Allan
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 115-134
Journal
Historical Social Research, 48 (2023) 2
Issue topic
Sleep, Knowledge, Technology: Studies of the Sleep Lab, Sleep Tracking and Beyond
ISSN
0172-6404
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed