hyalosign
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]hyalosign (plural hyalosigns)
- (film theory) In the context of Gilles Deleuze's film philosophy, particularly in his work Cinema 2: The Time-Image, a specific type of cinematic image that embodies a fusion of the actual and the virtual, often illustrated through motifs like mirrors or crystals. These images disrupt linear temporality, creating a direct presentation of time in film.
- 1989, Gilles Deleuze, translated by Hugh Tomlinson and Robert Galeta, Cinema 2: the Time-Image, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, translation of Cinéma 2, L’Image-temps (in French), pages 272-273:
- This is a progress in relation to the opsign : we saw how the crystal (the hyalosign) ensures the correlate of the opsign and the sonsign.
- 2010 May 26, Christopher Vitale, “On Hyalo-Signs and Crystal-Images”, in wordpress:
- According to Deleuze, any shard of a crystal is a hyalo-sign (literally, a 'glass-sign'), which can either go opaque or clear, that is, it can act as transparent glass or as a mirror.
- 2016, David Dreamer, Deleuze’s Cinema Books: Three Introductions to the Taxonomy of Images., Edinburgh University Press, page 145:
- In other words, opsigns and sonsigns stymie the seamless flow of actual image to actual image; while the hyalosign links the actual image to a virtual correlate.