Saturday, January 15, 2011

The way we live now ...

... How novels came to terms with the internet. (Hat tip, Lee Lowe.)

It is what the internet lures out of us – hubris, daydreams, avarice, obsessions – that makes it so potent and so volatile. TV's power is serenely impervious; it does all the talking, and we can only listen or turn it off. But the internet is at least partly us; we write it as well as read it, perform for it as well as watch it, create it as well as consume it. Watching TV is a solitary activity that feels like a communal one, while the internet is a communal experience masquerading as solitude.

1 comment:

  1. Even this article seems behind the times. There are whole forms of fiction now that are Internet-based, such as Oulipo and flash fiction, which often mine the internet for source material. Very interactive. (Usually not very good, one might add, but that's a separate issue.)

    And I've seen at least two novels on printed paper that were inspired by the internet; one of them was all emails, the other was all chat material.

    So as usual artists are quietly going ahead and leaving the critics to catch up.

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