Loving Big Brother: Performance, Privacy and Surveillance Space

Front Cover
Psychology Press, 2004 - Art - 246 pages

In Loving Big Brother the author tackles head on the overstated claims of the crime-prevention and anti-terrorism lobbies. But he also argues that we desire and enjoy surveillance, and that, if we can understand why this is, we may transform the effect it has on our lives. This book looks at a wide range of performance and visual artists, at popular TV shows and movies, and at our day-to-day encounters with surveillance, rooting its arguments in an accessible reading of cultural theory.

Constant scrutiny by surveillance cameras is usually seen as - at best - an invasion of privacy, and at worst an infringement of human rights. But in this radical new account of the uses of surveillance in art, performance and popular culture, John E McGrath sets out a surprizing alternative: a world where we have much to gain from the experience of being watched.

This iconoclastic book develops a notion of surveillance space - somewhere beyond the public and the private, somewhere we will all soon live. It's a place we're just beginning to understand.

 

Contents

Thinking surveillance
1
An ideology of crime
19
Perverting privacy
56
Accidental death
99
Dimensions doubles and data Producing surveillance space
131
Staging the spectator
164
Encountering surveillance
196
Notes
221
Bibliography
236
Index
241
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About the author (2004)

John E. McGrath is Artistic Director of Manchester's groundbreaking Contact Theatre, which brings bold new performance to diverse young audiences. He has directed work by Lemn Sissay, Jeff Noon and others. In both theatre and theoretical work he focuses on the intersections of space, media and language.