Benjamin Geer on 14 Nov 2000 21:44:29 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> Cellphones and the Cancer of Cellspace |
On Mon, Nov 13, 2000 at 07:15:52PM -0800, Michael H Goldhaber wrote: > More than ever, my extremely idiosyncratic observations suggest, the > young require being surrounded in reality or through the > communication system, by their peers. thus the observed silliness of > cell phone messages or chat rooms talk are no different from the > silliness of the great majority of notes passed during school, and > the like. the prime purpose is contact, not the transfer of new > information. This is an example of something Adorno described in _Minima Moralia_: people talk more and more, but they say less and less. One must constantly keep up the illusion that one is communicating, but without expressing anything that might require the listener to make the slightest effort in order to understand it. Thus all ideas, and all truly personal experiences, are taboo. One can express only those thoughts which fit familiar patterns. As expression declines, so does listening: if you know that the person speaking to you is merely going to say the expected sorts of things, you don't need to pay attention. You can just nod and smile. This is why people laugh at jokes before they hear the punch line. They're ignoring the words; they just listen to the tone of voice, and try to provide the expected reaction. In the U.S., "friends" are considered to be those with whom conversation takes on a friendly rhythm; a semblance of harmony is maintained. The less we communicate, the more lonely we feel, and the more we rush to embrace anything that resembles contact. Thus, mobile phones serve to provide the *appearance* of communication, for the participants as well as for onlookers in the street. But those who don't dare to express themselves in person, or don't know how, will do no better over a mobile phone. The result is a vicious circle; the end result will be a world in which people talk ceaselessly, but feel completely isolated. -- Benjamin Geer http://www.btinternet.com/~amisuk/bg _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold