Archive for the ‘critique’ Category
Feds go overboard in prosecuting information activist | Ars Technica
Feds go overboard in prosecuting information activist | Ars Technica.
Information activist: Aaron Swartz. (Article pointed out to me by Jamie Love, who had reposted it to FB.)
Can Social Media Sell Soap?
Can Social Media Sell Soap? – NYTimes.com.
Notes: Been meaning to write on this idea, to investigate the rise/development of narrative models of representative persons, distinct from the legal category of “reasonable man,” but not alien to it. My sense of this notion of the representative person derives from American culture, as in Emerson’s essays, to be sure, but well before. Even the very idea of a democracy implies–no, is explicitly about–the idea that the man on the street is the like all others, with only degrees of difference distinguishing one from the other. Except, in the case of American culture (and it’s hardly unique), the quality of race affords a catastrophic decoupling of shared identity.
Or would, for those most committed to the idea, of any identity shared by all minus x, just as any number of other shibboleths drive difference into the bone of contentious identity.
But it still gives us the logic, of conceiving persons as plausible imaginations whom we can conjure out of wish and memory and hidden desires and impart with a logic like intention that in the telling persuades the reader that this is true.
The interesting thing to me is not that this operation of Western fiction, which has prevailed since pretty much after the first novels were sold, is decaying or is not decaying–it isn’t, for reasons that Auerbach argues–but that its currency is equally never stable, oscillatory with surface effects, the traces of identity scattered by the desires of others and not to be found in the history of the subject. (There is no subject, at least no unitary subject that is not in the end a fiction. Not that that makes any difference.)
So in this current frame, where the game of advertising and marketing and community–all fields I am now deeply in and by which I earn my living and whose discourse I find interesting to no end–the point is not to find the what women (or men or children) want, but to understand that the archive that makes up our collection of desires and actions and actionable desires and desirable actions is sometimes incoherent, held together by accidents of location, context, inertia; and sometimes fiercely, synthetically logical, and sometimes both. That the Victorian project of order is not irrelevant because it failed fully to account for the irrational and biological (that as always implicit) but a theatre that both retains its full power of ordering identity while … we continue to do what we otherwise do outside of that theatrical space, perhaps in another one.
And I’m reminded, again, of that very great novel, Trouble on Triton, by Delany. 3 billion on Earth killed by the spacers (as Asimov would have had them), by those outside of Earth: a genocide. The novel anticipates his later work, such as (again the reframing of Asimov), Stars in my pocket, where again, the genocide of cultures continues as a logical outcome of family structures that predicate identity on sharply drawn logical grounds. But this, as has also been noted, is simply the Enlightenment project carried to its terminus.
I tend too to avoid Valley writing, as I’m always skeptical that it is not just self-congratulatory marketing. But….
I’ve long refused reading the books of the top minds of the Valley, probably from fear I could be convinced and would have to change my “fixed mindset” as I recently discover my brain was working. Hopefully, I’m not yet 30 and YES, I did read one of these books and YES, it’s a game-changer for me at least.
Chris Anderson’s “Maker : the new industrial revolution” is a brilliant book, one of the kind you can’t close without DOING something. And it really matches with all my current thoughts on a community-based world (may sound familiar for US readers, it’s a new world for Europe at least, and what I experience in Asia confirms it’s a US exception). By the way, this post and a few other to come will go into a new category (after “Playing with Data” and “Going social in Asia”), say hi to “The…
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Libraries
Ebooks are not an improvement; they are an addition. They can’t be used as an excuse to take books away from the everyday world and into the virtual world. We all know that browsing an index is nothing like being in a bookshop or a library. Libraries and publishers will come to an arrangement about ebook lending and that could work very well as a satellite service for library users – providing we keep Planet Library. For kids in particular, ebooks aren’t the answer. Put six picture books of front of a child and she’ll soon find her own way. Give her a library shelf of books and she can pull them out all over the floor. Early reading is physicality – the taste, smell, weight of books.
via We must protect and reinvent our local libraries | Jeanette Winterson | Books | The Guardian.
Nigeria’s BlackBerry addiction offers hope for Research in Motion | Technology | The Guardian
Nigeria’s BlackBerry addiction offers hope for Research in Motion | Technology | The Guardian.
The popularity of BlackBerrys in Nigeria is partly born of necessity. Erratic internet services and a nonexistent landline network are plugged by unlimited data bundles, costing about £12 a month. Unpredictable phone networks force those who can afford it to own two handsets.
“I already have another smartphone, but I need a BlackBerry pin number to socialise with friends and get babes. BlackBerry has an edge because of the pinging,” George Emeka, a university student said, using the colloquial term for its instant messaging service.
Others are getting more bang for their buck. Yahya Balogun, who lives in a Lagos slum, used eight months of savings to buy a secondhand model. The taxi driver has caught on to the growing number of high-end businesses who advertise and communicate using BlackBerry pin numbers as well as traditional means. “All my clients in [upmarket district] Victoria Island own BlackBerrys. It is a good investment,” Balogun said.
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