0 the fact that something seems real and important, so that you feel involved with it:
Pre-recorded TV programmes have so much less immediacy and warmth than live theatre.
1 the quality or feeling of being directly involved:
Recording before a live audience captures the immediacy of the performance.
This is not to say that the visual ray account really does reduce spatial perception to immediacy.
It brings a passive body of information into electronic immediacy with seven 'knowledge blocks', each with cross hyperlinks.
The intensity and immediacy of their expressive intention provide empowering qualities that thrive on musical interaction.
The narration, in short, tends towards choral action, and has the immediacy and gestures of direct contact.
On the other, she seeks that immediacy through the acknowledgement and multiplication of media.
The buzz of immediacy is the same in social work.
We have no thematic access to this experience, and hence it is impossible to reflect upon that experience in its immediacy.
The immediacy of its illusionism conflicted with his sense of history's impenetrability.