Many people lament the historically recent technological shift in
our culture. "They" say that it has imprisoned people in a reflection
of reality, disconnecting them from the actual, and dehumanized them.
Instead of interacting with people proper, so the rhetoric goes, people
are now engaging with a screen that only encapsulates a whiff or an
echo of humanity.
Of course, some of this is true. The internet
and it's outdated predecessor the television can be seen as compact
psychological cages. To me, however, it seems that people who hold this
view forget the painful, madness-inducing isolation paramount in this
world. They must be city-folk who have a healthy social atmosphere for
intellectual, social, and pleasurable endeavors.
For most of
the population, of America at least (the only country I can speak for),
who are suffocating in traps that parallel the technological ones like
slave-driving jobs, miserable and self-indulgent neighborhoods, and
ignorant relatives, the internet can be a utopian window for
cross-state relations. Instead of one being stuck in a sleepy, dull
area, one can converse about favorite artists, authors, musicians, etc.
through forums which house engaging discussions. One can experience
bright and life-affirming personalities through comedic videos on
Youtube. One can elevate one's mental faculties by browsing the latest
political commentaries on Rollingstone.com or CNN.com. One can learn
about anything at the drop of a hat. (What do I want to learn about
today? The baboon spiders i.e. tarantulas of South Africa? Done).
Of
course there's a lot of bogus information out there but one just has to
be smart about sources. When in the history of the world wasn't there a
lot of bogus information out there? Woody Allen said, "Everything our
parents told us was good is bad. Sun, milk, red meat, college." How
many parents force their children to eat everything on their plate?
This enforcement leads to enlarging stomachs and tendencies that
encourage obesity. Where did they get this "method" from? It wasn't the
internet. Everything my father's mother told me, God rest her soul, was
B.S. and she never owned a TV or a computer! She believed in fake
illnesses like "Liver Groan" (you catch this from jumping in the pool
too much--and don't think she was just using this as a method for
instilling fear...she actually believed in her diagnosis because her
mother told her about it).
I'm more terrified of isolated
information handed down from generation to generation than an
information free-for-all that, when surfed right, can be enlightening.
This new transferral of information may be wreaking havoc on the
tightly wound minds of scholars but screw 'em. Don't get me wrong. I
have a lot of respect for good
professors but many of them seem to be more concerned with tooting
their own horn, puffing themselves up, and social positioning. Maybe
the internet's insistence (I realize this is grammatically wrong) on
collectivity (not that the literary world wasn't already heading this
way) will force them to concede a little ego.
If Jesus had
raised Lazarus from the dead in today's world, someone would have
posted a video from his cell phone showing the behind the curtain
switch of the dead body with an impostor. It was easy to deceive people
who had no other source of information but word of mouth.
Anyway,
people who regret the technologically-centered incarnation of reality
that we live in for the reason that it is socially isolating and an
information bedlam don't really understand that such a state is the
nature of the world and that this version helps people who would
otherwise be completely cut off stay in the game.