Shallow reading | Reflections on Technology, Media & Culture [PDF]

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Idea Transcript


Reflections on Technology, Media & Culture RICHARD COYNE CULTURE

Shallow reading

POSTED BY RICHARD COYNE ⋅ FEBRUARY 16, 2013 ⋅ 4 COMMENTS FILED UNDER BOOKS, BRAIN, GENERATION Y, HERMENEUTICS, INTERPREATION, NET GENERATION, POPULAR NON-FICTION, SHALLOW READING The Internet is changing the way our brains work, according to Nicholas Carr in his book The Shallows: “what the net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation” (p.6).

For all its benefits, he thinks the web habituates us to browsing, clicking, skimming and jumping around information. So it’s harder now to read books and other substantial texts in a deep and concerted way. At best, we are now dumbed-down pseudo-intellectuals who flit along the surface rather than going deep, and this tendency affects anyone habituated to Internet use, not just the young who have been brought up with it. I thought I would test this tendency in myself by treating Carr’s book in just this way, by reading the Amazon preview — skimming, skipping and jumping through it, and allowing myself to be distracted by extraneous associations and links. I might buy the book later. Beneath the negatively flowing shallows of the book’s polemic glides a countervailing current — that this tendency to explore interconnections and associations is no bad thing. The opposing view to Carr’s celebrates the fact that habituated web users don’t rely on the linear narratives provided by texts as presented by their authors, but construct their own narratives.

Reading is now a co-creative process, and in any case, readers are also writers, as they cut and paste, appropriate, assemble, cross-reference and diarise via social media commentary, not to mention blogs, reviews, opinion pages, emails, tweets and text messages. Carr warns us against this superficial profligacy. But Don Tapscott, in his book Grown Up Digital to which Carr refers, tells us to embrace it. According to Tapscott:

“I believe that we will see that being immersed in an interactive digital environment has made them smarter than your average TV-watching couch potato. They may read fewer works of literature, but they devote a lot of time to reading and writing online. As we will learn, that activity can be intellectually challenging. Instead of just numbly receiving information, they are gathering it from around the globe with lightning speed. Instead of just trusting a TV announcer to tell us the truth, they are assessing and scrutinizing the jumble of facts that are often contradictory or ambiguous. When they write to their blog or contribute a video, they have an opportunity to synethesize and come up with a new formulation, which leads to a giant opportunity for them. The Net Generation has been given the opportunity to fulfill their inherent human intellectual potential as no other generation” (p.98). So I’ve now been distracted by the Amazon preview of Grown Up Digital as well, pending a proper read at some later date. The comparisons are useful.

Going pop With the license granted by both authors to entertain or test distracting associations (negative or positive) I felt led to distract myself further by reflecting on the style of literature represented by these two books. Here’s what I believe.

1. Best-sellers such as The Shallows and Grown Up Digital, address a leisure reading market. The books make few intellectual demands on the reader. They can focus attention, provoke, and at times they can be inspiring. After reading Grown Up Digital I might feel inclined to listen more to what Net Generation kids have to say, rather than bracketing them as ignorant and unruly (if I ever did). 2. Within the books is a thread of reasoning that social scientists term “technological determinism.” Carr and Tapscott seem to think that the outcomes and effects they describe are caused by the technology. The social, cultural and political forces that encourage such technological developments (eg smart phones, the web), and the technology’s part in complex institutional, educational, economic and infrastructural networks get sidelined. This keeps the story focussed and simple. 3. The presentations in such books are scientistic, ie there’s an appeal to the authority of science. Both writers appeal to brain science in particular. Knowing that the brain is capable of restructuring in response to new stimuli, such as clickable information sources, is not much different to saying that we are capable of learning and adopting new habits. According to Tapscott, we used to think that brains do not change and grow. Apparently, “Modern scientists have now disproved this theory” (p.99). To have such confidence is scientism. 4. Popular literature operates with extremes. It’s either all good or all bad; we are getting smarter or dumber; more connected or more isolated. It overuses overstatement and exaggeration. 5. The language is that of the “paradigm shift.” The pop digital literature sets out to convince us that we are missing out on some important insights, and then admits us to a set of secrets. In this case we need to tune in to the Net Generation. 6. In keeping with the demands of leisure reading, the arguments are emotional and emotive. Any narrative, however prosaic or abstract, has this. But for leisure reading the means are set firmly on the personal: you the reader, me the author, or a third party. It’s not enough that Tapscott interviewed some adolescent activists at a venue “where you can literally bump into Bill Gates, Bono, Google CEO Eric Schmidt, and Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf all in one day” (269), but the introductions were facilitated by “British actress and screenwriter Emma Thompson,” who said “get ready to be inspired.” My own superficial speed reading habits compel me instinctively to jump these sections. 7. Calls to action: in a way, such books are long drawn out manifestoes. They seek to be instrumental and change behaviours, generally by offering advice. Much of that is geared to business, but sometimes how to keep your political party in power. For Tapscott, “Hire more young people,” “Don’t broadcast to Net Geners. Think interaction, not unidirectional communication” (268). The book is an instrument in itself, a means of garnering livelihood or profit for the author, and so it needs a large market. 8. Pop literature of course breaks many of the rules of academic writing. It selects evidence to make its case, generalises from too few cases, makes scant reference to intellectual context, and fails to subject its hypotheses to the scrutiny of opposing voices. But academic writing often does this too. 9. In order to keep the story simple, popular non-fiction writers either deliberately or unwittingly ignore the massive literature in social science, history, philosophy, cultural theory, media studies and the arts and humanities in general that has a bearing on the topic at hand. The only foray into English literature entered into by Carr or Tapscott is the observation that EngLit teachers are finding it harder to get students to read books. Never mind what those books might be saying. 10. Popular non-fiction has the capacity to become part of the phenomenon they purport to describe. I never worried whether or not Marshall McLuhan was right about the way electronic media change the way we think. His books changed the way many people thought — about how technology changes thinking. This is why I think some popular books need to be read (or browsed) by academics. Some books rise from the shallows to exert considerable cultural influence, to be explained, explored, contextualised, criticised and possibly resisted. They also provide evidence of opinion and insight. Dare I say, as they are shallow, they can be skim read with ease, or dipped into. Shallow reading is just like deep reading in that we come to the text with our own baggage, ie our own presuppositions about what the text contains. The peril of so-called “shallow” reading is that we miss out on many of the opportunities to let the text challenge our presuppositions.

Without the analysis, comparisons, stories, associations and nuances offered by the full text we may simply use it to reinforce our own prejudices. So as a confessed shallow reader of The Shallows and Grown Up Digital, I’m probably just reading into the texts what I want or expect to see. This is all about hermeneutics, about which more could be said. See blog posts tagged Interpretation.

References Carr, Nicholas. 2011. The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains. New York: WW Norton. Tapscott, Don. 2009. Grown Up Digital: How the Net Generation is Changing Your World. New York: McGraw Hill.

Note Also see posts on Secrets of writing for the web, Manifestoes and madness and Writing texts that flow.

About Richard Coyne The cultural, social and spatial implications of computers and pervasive digital media spark my interest ... enjoy architecture, writing, designing, philosophy, coding and media mashups. View all posts by Richard Coyne »

Discussion

4 thoughts on “Shallow reading”

1. I enjoyed your post immensely – reading it and popping-in and out (with all due respect) to check a few other windows (amazon, University library site, Google books, etc.) to get to know a little bit more about the books. I found interesting this notion of being immersed into the condition ‘The Shallows’ refers to, in order to ‘test’ it, or ‘perform’ it. In a while I will switch off my computer and digital media to avoid distraction and read my fantastic new paperback novel (well, chatting to my friend at the same time, cooking dinner, listening to music and thinking of other things…)

POSTED BY ANASTASIA | MARCH 18, 2013, 9:30 PM REPLY TO THIS COMMENT 2. Hi Anastasia, I’ve got 10 minutes to go before a meeting and I’m spending time responding to your interesting comment, instead of using the time to brief myself on the meeting. But maybe I can just coast along at the meeting and give the impression I know what it’s about … POSTED BY RICHARD COYNE | MARCH 19, 2013, 1:44 PM REPLY TO THIS COMMENT

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