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#1 |
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Digital Marxism? Book says we have surrendered too much of our lives to our screens
Get ready for a potentially controversial book, coming mid-2010.
Back in 2006, William Powers, a national media critic who lives on Cape Cod in eastern Massachusetts, wrote a 75-page paper titled "Hamlet's BlackBerry: Why Paper Is Eternal" that was published by a Harvard think tank, and it still available online as free pdf read. In fact, it available at the link below if you go to the extra icon. Powers' longform essay caught the attention of publishers in New York, and with a major change in emphasis, a book will be published in July and titled "Hamlet's BlackBerry: A Practical Philosophy for Building a Good Life in the Digital Age." Note the new subtitle. According to Powers, the book will bear no resemblance to the long journalism piece that led to the book deal, and is not even about paper. According to Powers, "The book is about managing life in our connected world, and the need for a new philosophy." Here's the link to the publisher's web page: http://www.harpercollinscatalogs.com/harper/527_1300_313837383333.htm The HarperCollins pre-publication publicity says of the book: "A crisp, passionately argued polemic that challenges the sacred dogma of the digital age -- the more we connect through technology, the happier we are -- and offers a new, practical philosophy for life in a world of screens." More from the PR department: "At a time when everyone, from big businesses to ordinary individuals, is trying to make sense of their connected lives, 'Hamlet's Blackberry' presents a bold new paradigm for understanding the devices that now demand so much of our time and attention. Written in a lively, engaging style, 'Hamlet's BlackBerry' shows how our computers and mobile devices are changing the way we think, feel, and relate to others. While these technologies are tremendously helpful, they are also becoming our greatest burden, making it harder for us to focus and think clearly, do our best work and achieve the depth and fulfillment we crave." And this: "'Hamlet's BlackBerry' argues that we've surrendered too much of our lives to our screens, by following a philosophy the author calls Digital Maximalism. He offers an alternative approach that any individual or organization can use to manage their connectedness more wisely. Drawing on the ideas of some of the most brilliant thinkers in the history of human connectedness, from Socrates to Shakespeare and Ben Franklin to Marshall McLuhan, this new philosophy proceeds from the simple notion that connectedness serves us best when it'ss offset by its opposite, disconnectedness. There are ways to strike a healthy balance between the two, and Hamlet's BlackBerry shows how, using concrete examples from everyday life." |
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#2 |
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LINK for original 75 page paper in pdf version, free:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/3562724/Ha...per-Is-Eternal |
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#3 |
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Well, I'm getting started on the essay. So far it's written reasonably well, and it may have some good points.
But I must say, that reading an essay subtitled "Why Paper is Eternal" in PDF format on a laptop strikes me as rather amusingly ironic... ![]() |
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#4 |
Which way is up?
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This is getting out of hand more then the whole videogames violence debacle, I never wanted to say this.
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#5 | |
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Quote:
And the book is very different from the essay. Essay mirrored 2006 ideas and culture; the book will mirror 2010 ideas and culture.... |
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#6 |
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so which is it? Digital Marxism . . . or Digital Maximalism?
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#8 |
Now you lishen here...
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Dan, Dan seems to read digital marxism into the author's Digital Maximalism.
Why? Because it is more likely to make his single issue horse appear alive. ![]() |
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#9 |
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i didn't write this book...... William Powers did.....he used the phrase....i never heard of it before......... what horse?.....which color?.....a horse of different color? ...but okay, sure change the subject...... [smile]
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#10 |
Now you lishen here...
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Dan Dan, you titled your post "Digital Marxism". The HarperCollins PR department blurbs you posted refer to the authors use of the term "digital maximalism".
You are trying to get attention by using the more outrageous term "digital marxism". Since a moderator decided to place your post on the front page, I guess you succeeded. |
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#11 |
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No, that wasn't the question. The article you link to uses the phrase "Digital Maximalism". What we are asking is why you have chosen to change it to "Digital Marxism" - a very different thing.
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#12 |
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I think it's a typo.
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#13 | |
"Assume a can opener..."
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Quote:
"The Depth we crave?" Our best work, which we really want to do but can't because we cannot focus our desires on what we want to do? There seems to be some linguistic confusion here. Either we want something or we don't. We might want to want something, but that's a different matter. What the blurb seems to be saying is that we have a first-order desire to want to work, whereas it's really arguing that we should want this, which is an entirely different point. (A lot more preachy, too.) Sigh. PS. I suspect that this is where the typo came from ![]() Last edited by zerospinboson; 01-11-2010 at 05:47 AM. |
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#14 |
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Sounds interesting, but I couldn't be bothered with signing up for scribd and all the other hoops I had to jump through to download the original PDF, so I googled for a link - here it is, I hope there's no problem with sharing it here:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/presspol/...d39_powers.pdf You can also search for it here: http://www.hks.harvard.edu/presspol/publications/ Last edited by orwell2k; 01-11-2010 at 06:28 AM. |
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#15 | |
"Assume a can opener..."
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To quote a bit from The Public Domain: Enclosing the Commons of the Mind
Quote:
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