Seeing Sense Lionel WeeForeword by Sir Philip Pullman, CBE, FRSL Illustrated foreword by Chris Riddell, OBE The burgeoning field of visual literacy can be universally understood across a wide variety of cultural backgrounds, regardless of traditional literacy levels. A key tool for navigating digital devices, there is often an antipathy surrounding visual literacy borne out of stigma and at times, intimidation. Seeing Sense brings together research and best practice from
this book begins by taking in her work in front of the camera
The first collection of essays on Frantz Fanon's classic anti-colonial text
They took pride in their achievements and shared a conviction that the visual culture they created was far superior to that of the previous thousand years
especially authoritarian governments
and the challenge that new media poses to governance in a developing nation faced with innumerable economic
easy-to-read format
Freedman also looks at film noir and Westerns
By looking at the history of the body and medicine it considers how the French people mobilised for the war effort and how their ultimate defeat had cultural and social consequences which led to the fin-de-siècle spirit
It also includes theological texts (Philo)
highlighting historic King Midas and Phrygia's ties with Lydia
executions and dashed hopes
’ and discusses his very particular way of constructing films at the uneasy interface of the individual