Slashdot Mirror


How the Internet Changed the Way We Read (dailydot.com)

An anonymous reader writes: UC Literature Professor Jackson Bliss puts into words something many of you have probably experienced: the evolution of the internet and mobile devices has changed how we read. "The truth is that most of us read continuously in a perpetual stream of incestuous words, but instead of reading novels, book reviews, or newspapers like we used to in the ancien régime, we now read text messages, social media, and bite-sized entries about our protean cultural history on Wikipedia."

Bliss continues, "In the great epistemic galaxy of words, we have become both reading junkies and also professional text skimmers. ... Reading has become a relentless exercise in self-validation, which is why we get impatient when writers don't come out and simply tell us what they're arguing. ... Content—whether thought-provoking, regurgitated, or analytically superficial, impeccably-researched, politically doctrinaire, or grammatically atrocious—now occupies the same cultural space, the same screen space, and the same mental space in the public imagination. After awhile, we just stop keeping track of what's legitimately good because it takes too much energy to separate the crème from the foam."

17 of 148 comments (clear)

  1. Obligatory by pushing-robot · · Score: 5, Funny

    tl;dr

    --
    How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
  2. Not gonna read this by russotto · · Score: 5, Informative

    With that much excessively verbose pomposity in the summary, the article must be insufferable.

    1. Re:Not gonna read this by binarylarry · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, just checkout this introductory paragraph:

      Oh freddled gruntbuggly,
      Thy micturations are to me,
      As plurdled gabbleblotchits,
      On a lurgid bee,
      That mordiously hath blurted out,
      Its earted jurtles,
      Into a rancid festering confectious organ squealer.

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    2. Re:Not gonna read this by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 4, Funny

      I skimmed it and you're right. Sweeping generalizations tossed in a word salad.

      I just spent 6 hours reading Heinlein on e ink, so I humored him. Meanwhile, the same has been said in fewer, clearer words for at least 5 years now, with predictions of same around the time facebook, texting, and news aggregators went mainstream. Each time, that is.

      Take old news and wrap it in New paper.

    3. Re:Not gonna read this by ljhiller · · Score: 4, Funny

      I literally did not understand what he was saying (the the quoted summary). I don't have the patience to decode what he's trying to say in this convoluted mess of word salad. Why doesn't he just come out and state his thesis? Maybe I'll just look him up on wikipedia.

    4. Re:Not gonna read this by rudy_wayne · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I literally did not understand what he was saying (the the quoted summary). I don't have the patience to decode what he's trying to say in this convoluted mess of word salad. Why doesn't he just come out and state his thesis? Maybe I'll just look him up on wikipedia.

      I like his unintentional humour: "which is why we get impatient when writers don't come out and simply tell us what they're arguing."

      Long-winded prose, which uses 1000 words when only 10 are needed, used to be confined to academia. But now, thanks to the interwebs, it's everywhere.

    5. Re:Not gonna read this by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Give him a break, he's a Literary professor. Words are his life...

      Even allowing for that - when someone uses a phrase as ridiculous as "incestuous words", it serves as a warning flag telling me they almost certainly don't have anything to offer beyond pomposity.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    6. Re:Not gonna read this by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      UCI - My school!

      Okay, Dr. Bliss needs to have a thesaurus removed from his colon, wherein it was undoubtedly placed by some angry freshman, but the point is an interesting one. Back in the nineteen hundreds, when to access information we needed to leave home and drive to a public building called a "library" and carefully select printed works of interest, we absorbed information only when we specifically intended to. The mechanics of this process forced us to remember specific authors and publications as being our sources. And the distribution paradigm was always one-to-many, information flowing from authors through their august gatekeeping Publishers to the plebeian eye.

      Today, it's raining 'content'. The lordly Publisher, and his retinue of pimply-faced grad students who made sure that only approved Major Authors made it past the slush pile, is all but gone. Because we can search effortlessly in a world of diverse data, we no longer have to depend on a few authors we trust to define the culture we live in. And furthermore, we can now talk back. One-to-many distribution has become the shrieking of many-to-many. This confuses quite a few of us.

  3. TL;DR by penguinoid · · Score: 4, Funny

    TL;DR: Kids these days.

    --
    Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
  4. Incestuous Words by mentil · · Score: 4, Funny

    most of us read continuously in a perpetual stream of incestuous words

    Remember kids, that's where portmanteau words come from.

    --
    Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
  5. Why your article won't be read by Cowclops · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not even making a slashdot-type "nobody reads the article" joke here - literally no one anywhere is going to read the article when you use high-level SAT words and phrases like:

    incestuous words
    regime (not referring to a country's leadership)
    protean
    epistemic
    doctrinaire

    If its supposed to be ironic, I get it, but if its not then you failed miserably and don't even understand your own ideas.

    I think its good to have as big of a vocabulary as possible and I actually recognize most of these words or could figure it out from contrast, and I consider myself to have a fairly above-average vocab due to having an English teacher for a Mom, but repeatedly using "big" words like those is just a shortcut to letting us know you're an asshole without much to say.

    tldr version:
    tldr.

    1. Re:Why your article won't be read by chihowa · · Score: 3, Insightful

      His use of "contrast" instead of "context" might not have been an accident, which highlights one of the reasons that I have a hard time reading much of what is written today. You get a huge serving of it here on Slashdot, but even people who are paid to write in English often regularly try to use words that they don't actually know: from the famous "intensive purposes" to the use of "idealistic" instead of "idyllic" (which made me cringe while reading an article this morning).

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
  6. Re:A glut of information, a lack of attention span by khasim · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I disagree. I don't think it is the attention span. I skip reading things if the author has not clearly stated his/her point within the first 3 paragraphs.

    From the summary:

    The truth is that most of us read continuously in a perpetual stream of incestuous words, but instead of reading novels, book reviews, or newspapers like we used to in the ancien régime, we now read text messages, social media, and bite-sized entries about our protean cultural history on Wikipedia.

    What does the phrase "incestuous words" mean?

    Why is "continuously" used in the same sentence with "perpetual"?

    How is "cultural history" associated with "protean"?

    The problem isn't the attention span. The problem is trying to figure out what someone is really saying. Electrons are cheaper than ink. That does not mean it is acceptable to pack in the adjectives and adverbs just because you don't have to pay a printer.

  7. Re:Not new by rudy_wayne · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is not a new phenomenon. I remember a lawyer giving me her newspaper at the courthouse when I was 8 or 9. "

    Wait . . . . what?

  8. Re:A glut of information, a lack of attention span by khasim · · Score: 4, Interesting

    He's using "Protean" (which should be capitalized) to mean "changing."

    That is what I suspected. The problem is that "history" should not be "Protean".

    Instead of

    ... our protean cultural history on Wikipedia

    I would suggest "our Protean culture". Or even "... our changing culture".

    I am reminded of The Eye or Argon.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Eye_of_Argon

  9. Legitimately good? by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Who's to say what is "legitimately" good?

    There are several points of view that all encompass "good." A piece of writing might be
    - funny
    - insightful
    - artistic
    - emotional
    - provocative
    - motivational
    - well-crafted

    Each of these (and other characteristics) might characterize writing as "good" even if it doesn't possess all of them.

    In other words, beauty (or goodness) is in the eye of the beholder.

    1. Re:Legitimately good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      A minor correction: A piece of writing might be:
      - funny
      - insightful
      - informative
      - offtopic
      - flamebait
      - normal
      - troll
      - redundant
      - interesting
      - overrated
      - underrated