Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Fantastical Respite From the Unexamined Life

The current media equation seeks to dramatize and sensationalize the news. Many reporters quote policy makers, bolstering their reputations by reporting the official lines of the day as truths, only to subvert these professional figures with scandalous narratives when the publication next goes to press. Reporters are taught to keep their opinions far away from their words, assuming that it is possible to remain objective in situations where fellow human beings are involved. However, they are also expected to practice common sense in terms of what to report and with whom to speak. Again, under the assumption that this, by no means, involves a subjective move.

W. Lance Bennett, in his book News: The Politics of Illusion, names this public information cycle the “authority-disorder bias.” Narratives in the news are constructed of “generic plot elements,” or “versatile and tireless themes that can be combined endlessly within personalized, dramatized, and fragmented news episodes” writes Bennett. The news seeks to restore order, he argues, yet where the political landscape was once successfully “normalized,” now “the news increasingly finds ways to challenge the pronouncements of officials and the presumption of order in society.” 

As entertainment and information companies begin to drop away one by one, as these industries continue their pursuit of a golden system to garner the highest ratings, and as the noise generated by an ever-growing number of media outlets, fueled by bright technology and attractive people, reaches a crescendo, a quieter and less aggressive presence asserts itself behind the expensive cameras, thick makeup and years of journalistic experience, seasoned in the field and the newsroom. They are the personal blogs.

An editor at the now defunct Seattle PI recently told me of the unique opportunity the Internet begets for the literary-minded journalist. “Forget the inverted pyramid,” he said with defiance. Instead, the story should flow like a proper narrative. To draw the reader in and establish a personal connection is necessary for building an Internet readership. To create the seamless flow of ideas like the literary page turner may seem surprising coming from the mouth of a news editor at a major newspaper, but the plummeting popularity of hard-news style newspapers demands a change. In trying to move a daily print operation to an online only business, these ideas are at the front of this journalist’s mind.

Where has the personal relevance gone? Where has the background information necessary to truly understanding a local, national or international event or phenomenon been hiding? To what has citizens’ sense of accountability and consciousness been directed? Focused so intently on the highs and lows of human life, the bulk of a person’s daily thoughts, actions and interactions are all but overlooked, swept under the table and thus forgotten.

It is time to shift our definitions of entertainment—as well as the self-definition and world understanding found therein—away from fragmented, climactic moments and toward a less elitist aggregation of collective understanding. In short, we must find the commonplaces upon which seemingly disparate communities may connect.

Dwelling places—as blogs are—have the capacity to evoke what fragmented reality-based experiences can’t establish on their own. These worldviews [or dwelling places] are occupied and shared everyday with those at work and at home and at the store. Blogs have the ability to create these dwelling places in a less ephemeral manner, as symbols and as commonplaces upon which people in varied geographic locations, occupations and ages may converse.  The dwelling places hold patterns of behavior where people are able to negotiate their own identities. To do this they build expectations for how certain qualities should look, thus constructing a framework for how the qualities appear in the day to day.

To look at the qualities that create places—an expert or competent voice, the rhetor’s goodwill toward the audience and liability in terms of character—founds this idea of blogs as dwelling places. The subject of a blog, then, can be anything from the mundane to the outlandish. Rituals themselves, in fact, can function as dwelling places. Oftentimes, the ritual aspect of the day-to-day becomes the sole narrative of personal blogs. The blog format itself begets extreme personalization. Most authors use the first person to address their audience, speaking with them as if across the kitchen table or in step arm in arm down city streets.

All writers, public personas and, for that matter, people in general must establish their ethos when stepping before an audience. This other could be as informal as a new friend or co-worker, or as official as a professor in front of her students, a journalist, or world leader. Part of one’s ethos indeed lies in the situation where confronting the other—setting, time of day, other people. Though much of the trust sought by the rhetor must be invented, created by the speaker herself in moments conducive to audience reception.

Using the first person holds a greater chance of establishing deep connections with the audience, as opposed to second and third which are more informal and barred, less personal.

Molly Wizenberg, one blogger who employs the first person in her writing, is the voice and life behind the experiences, tastes and photographs presented on her popular blog Orangette. Since her beginnings as a food blogger in July of 2004, Wizenberg’s mini-essays have steadily grown in readership as demonstrated by the increase in the number of comments her words provoke. Some posts have, of course, drawn more than others, some seem to have marked turning points in the number of vocal readers. The highest number of comments rally around stories marking personal milestones in Wizenberg’s life: her marriage and subsequent dinner and honeymoon, announcing the publication of her first book and revealing she and her husband’s soon to be restaurant, Delancy. Her readers are thus stirred by the concrete events that make a life; they are fortified by the day-to-day musings, wit, personal memories and, of course, tastes making up the body of her blog.

Wizenberg’s words resonate with her readers on a very personal level. Whether she and her readers share tastes, experiences or geographic proximity, comments take the form of congratulations, laudatory remarks on writing style or simple agreement in a specific love for, say, lobster and San Francisco. Wizenberg is, at the most fundamental level, telling a story. But the difference between her blog and other personal narrative blogs is that she offers people the chance to physically and emotionally take part in her experience. She leaves them with something tangible and lasting, something that will come to fruition hours, days or months later when the craving for a certain butterscotch cookie or céléri rémoulade surfaces. And it’s not just the craving but the possibility of entering such a warm and inviting world that inspires the act of memory, in turn assuring Wizenberg her audience will come by next Monday when she again offers a chair to her table.

Wizenberg’s subject, food, is memorable and sensual and oftentimes seductive. She elaborates on a taste by surrounding it with an inviting experience—often droll and sentimental with just enough irony to keep it respectable.

“If you’ve been reading for a while, you may remember that I have a thing for celery root. It’s sort of the Philip Seymour Hoffman of vegetables: pale and a little scruffy, not exactly handsome by common definitions, but rippling, rippling, with integrity and talent. Vegetables can have integrity, right? And talent? I hope so, or else I’m going to have to find a new analogy, and that could take a while.”  

It is important, however, not to become so immersed in a certain placated comfort, finding meaning all too easily without pushing oneself away from the accustomed daily rituals. David Foster Wallace put it quite extremely when he said, “It seems important to find ways of reminding ourselves that most ‘familiarity’ is meditated and delusive.” Yet, an ongoing critical examination and understanding of the ritualistic activities necessary for physical and psychic relief, in turn creating room for personal development, would not allow a sinking into blind, privileged comfort.

Wallace also noted that true freedom “means being conscious and aware enough to choose what you pay attention to and to choose how you construct meaning from experience. Because if you cannot exercise this kind of choice in adult life, you will be totally hosed.” He was speaking here about boredom, which some would argue is found in the daily rituals that make up the bulk of our life. “Properly handled, boredom can be an antidote to our national dependence on entertainment,” says D. T. Max in The New Yorker when interpreting Long Thing, Wallace’s third and unpublished book.” It is not by mere chance that critiques of fictional narratives are applied so easily when discussing the very real presence of personal blogs, of elevating the personal ritual to a place of significance.

Ella Ophir, in her essay Modernist Fiction and “the accumulation of unrecorded life”, suggests, through critic Erich Auerbach’s reading of Virginia Woolf’s work, that the personal narrative performs a service of human fellowship. “It is precisely the random moment,” he concludes, “which is comparatively independent of the controversial and unstable orders over which men fight and despair; it passes unaffected by them, as daily life. The more it is exploited, the more the elementary things which our lives have in common come to light.”

Blogs blatantly demonstrate foundational, defining elements of human behavior. They reinforce clichés by way of their very intent: it’s not the destination toward which the blogger steps post by post, but the whole long, chronologically listed journey that counts. They function the way any newspaper or special interest magazine would, providing a temporary fantasy world in which to escape for a momentary lapse in reality-based spatial orientation. Indeed, the images transport the viewer to a place of beauty, of chicness, of shine and silent charisma, or to a world of high drama, international intrigue, war and other larger-than-personal-life narratives.

Blogs documenting individuals’ personal style deliberately create a certain persona in the online space, mostly through photographs and with varying levels of commentary. These scrapbooks of self-expression either document the author’s own wardrobe choices or the choices of others encountered in daily life. Regardless of the body upon which the coveted style is draped, a certain aspiration is molded and modified with each new post. One of the more successful blogs of this nature, “The Sartorialist,” is the creation of Scott Schuman who’s aim was to photograph “people on the street” so as to give inspiration to other designers. “Rarely do [designers] look at the whole outfit as a yes or no but they try and look for the abstract concepts of color, proportion, pattern mixing or mixed genre,” explains Schuman on his blog.  He strives—and successfully accomplishes as evidenced by the media attention and his large, dedicated fan base—for the same qualities in his photos. His subjects range from the overtly stylish—models and magazine and artworld individuals all—to the quirky and oddly original. Though, Schuman is successful because of his eye’s discerning consistency when it comes to sartorial presence. He isn’t just shooting the outfit; he captures the subject’s character through their dress, grooming and stance.

Like a camera projects film onto a blank canvas, blogs are a public screen onto which people’s fantasies shine. They out the mind’s inside with pages and pages of fairytale, of desire, of fulfillment. Pages and pages offering a moment’s respite from a stilled dullness, perhaps from sitting inside before a computer screen or from a windowless room, perhaps from some other lonely isolation. In this way, fantasy functions rhetorically—people are always looking for ways to cope. Ironically, that which most would wish to escape from—some daily banality inducing boredom—might just become the fantastical respite from the unexamined life.

As readership of newspapers and print magazines shifts increasingly to web-based outlets, where a wealth of alluring diversions opens wide before the mediating reader, will the staid voice of the objective journalist follow suit? When writing for the web, if indeed print media does become extinct, will the same standards hold up before a young, media-savvy and independently minded audience? When the younger generation raised on blogs and self-selected news bites steers public discourse, will the focus be more introverted and relational, based upon finding those commonplaces so necessary for connecting with an audience on a personal level? Or will the isolated fragmentation of mass media override the opportunity to build community by means of increased communication in blog form?

At the end of the day, we are the meaning-makers, it is us who choose to believe any particular thing, us who consent to the flow or make a rapturous move against some mass or minute current. All of this, then, done in a process of finding our voice or trying to maintain some sort of continuance of this voice if ever thought to be found, perhaps modifying our voice to be in harmony or in opposition to the voices all around. By many methods, so we do this multi vaulted dance of tone and intent; in few moments do we realize a full shift in the Self, defined as that elusive “defining” moment, that marked revolving of time and space in one’s own direction that makes up so much of exalted thought and creative production and other such final unveilings. The million other thoughts and actions and observations are the true definers of character, the filling in of notes between crescendos, so important, foundational and necessary in their own right—essential to attaining some height of meaning, perhaps meaning for-themselves, in their own right, as is

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Claim: Ordinary Things as Worthy of Study

Blogs have the potential to act as stimulants --space to fill--for cultural and artistic creativity as Dijck argues in her essay. By functioning as sites in which to practice the necessary act of constructing personal narratives, they are a legitimate and fertile realm of social/cultural study.  


Tuesday, January 27, 2009

MAP II

Part I

“Mediated Memories: Personal Cultural Memory as Object of Cultural Analysis” by José van Dijck explores the significance in personal collections of artifacts—or mediated memories—that construct personal identity and thus contribute to the larger cultural memory, or the collective.

Dijck’s voice is authoritative. She approaches her audience from a sound level of understanding and demonstrates her intellectual exploration of the many voices—past and present—that have contributed to her topic of exploration: mediated memories. Though, what makes Dijck effective in her approach to her audience is the equality she establishes with the reader. Her subject permits many different and paradoxical views on human nature. Dijck acknowledges a wide range of these voiced theories on the significance of personal mediated memories in the individual’s life, in turn breaking away from the pessimistic idea of personal human insignificance in relation to the collective and arguing that our “private shoeboxes” of mediated memories have just as much significance by themselves as the collective “shoebox.”

Mediated memories, that is, what we as individuals deem important and valuable enough to keep and by which we remember certain events, is a very personal subject and one that is universally relatable. Thus, Dijck has an opportunity—from the very argument/subject itself—to appeal to her audience on an emotional level. She does so not by becoming overly expressive in her praise for human individuality, but by offering a precise metaphor to which she returns often in her discourse: the “private shoebox” in which—and here is an appeal to history, to nostalgia—past generations stored keepsakes, physical sites of memory, family heirlooms. This image has the capacity to call upon a host of associations in the reader, in turn resonating with their own method of collecting and mediating memories.

Underlying the strong emotional metaphor are the concrete voices Dijck employs to support, illustrate and frame her claim that the personal is important by itself. These rational arguments, some of which she takes as true—some of which she contests and breaks away from—are never left unexplained. Dijck embeds the theories of other sociologists, philosophers and psychologists within the context of her claim, never allowing the audience to stray far from her own perspective. Foucault, Huyssen and Hoskins are just a sampling of the many authorities whose published ideas Dijck uses to solidify her theory.

Dijck’s major claim is that individual mediated memories are worthy of study, interesting and relevant by themselves. In order to arrive at this conclusion, she makes many minor, supporting claims to help the reader arrive at the same destination. Individual memories cannot be separated from cultural context and thus from the collective identity. The very method and content through which people create these memory objects depend upon the culture’s prevailing technologies and structures of communication. The individual, then, is at once personal and part of the collective—they demand each other’s existence for being in themselves. Personal memory is “a cultural phenomenon that encompasses both the activities and products of remembering” (261).

Mediated memories, in Dijck’s theory, help people to make sense of their surroundings and shape personal identity. People thus make sense of their lives and relationships based upon these memories. Beginning with a discussion of personal cultural memory, Dijck shows how mediated memories act as the physical representation of the individual intersecting with culture. She considers these objects as both cultural acts as well as products of that culture. For example, Dijck describes a parent recording their child’s first steps. Using either one or multiple forms of documentation—written word, photo, video, etc.—the parent defines this moment in time and space, constructing a memory through various media. However, the available technologies dictate the way this recording—and remembering—takes place. A photograph of the moment will have a different impact than a written narrative of the event, and media used together will produce another effect altogether. “The decision to record such events is already, to a large extent, stipulated by cultural conventions, prescribing which event are symbolic or ritual highlights and thus worth flagging” (263).

Dijck also uses general knowledge about memory from the psychological field. Humans constantly reinterpret past events—memories are not fixed and stagnant, rather they continue to change based on the present. “... The act of memory incorporates the creation of memory products as well as their continuous (re)interpretation. Only from that creative act emerges a continuum between past and present; time and memory shape each other” (264).

Part II

Dijck often uses sustentative warrants to locate her claim. By presenting other psychologists’ and sociologists’ theories first {after the initial statement of her claim in the introduction}, she explains the alternative theories in her own words and either concurs or departs from their ideas. For example, after examining the theories of Huyssen and Hoskins, Dijck departs from one of their central claims. “... The emphasis on individual memory representations as building blocks for, or particular versions of, collective memory ignores the always inherent creative tension between individuality and collectivity...” (270). By means of disassociation, Dijck is successful in articulating and further explaining her claim.

Dijck also appeals, as was discussed earlier, to the audience on an emotional level. “Countering the overwhelming emphasis on collective memory by institutions, I would like to restore attention to individual mediated memories as collections worthy of academic scrutiny” (275).

Part I

“Culture in the Age of Blogging” by Terry Teachout is at once commentary on the function of blogs in today’s culture, historical analysis of their inevitable popularity as a form of communication and explanation/personal narrative into the authors experience of creating not the first art blog, but “the first to be written by a critic already active in the mainstream media...”

Teachout’s main claim is that blogs signal a new shift in standard media, which implies America’s deep cultural fragmentation as brought about in the last century. Subsequently, she explores the realities, pros, cons and possibilities of blogs, creating a list of commonalities across the blogosphere. Finally, she questions the potential of blogs and the role they will play in the future, shaping and influencing the cultural and social landscape.

Teachout relies heavily on history to show how her argument has merit. Giving a brief synopsis of U.S. history over the last 100 years, she draws the reader’s attention to specific events as major moments pushing cultural fragmentation to its current place. She appeals to authority to support her claims—Henry James and Israel Zangwill—among others and cites the fissure between left-wing academics and neo-conservatives as a major moment of cultural rupture. Perhaps her strongest argument, though, lies in the way media itself is shifting from corporately controlled newspapers to privately aggregated news stories from a variety of sources. Technology allowed for this shift, which, argues Teachout, is indicative of a culturally fragmented nation where one media source no longer satisfies people’s diverse interests. The day of the information middleman is not yet over, but it is drawing to a close.”

Teachout uses association and disassociation throughout her argument. Interestingly, she revisits positions she once held and made public only to disassociate her current ideas from her former. “But I was mistaken. When it came to culture, liberal domination of the news media and the educational establishment failed to trigger an oppositional movement of similar intensity.” Alternatively, taking association a step further, Teachout not only agrees with claims by Richard Brookhiser and Rupert Murdoch, she assumes enough authority to add onto their ideas. “What Murdoch did not say, but could have said...”

In terms of ethos, she uses a conversational voice to address the reader. As if in a casual, friendly exchange, her tone is upbeat and unselfconscious. Her personal narrative as a relatively early blogger runs alongside her discussion of the larger cultural phenomenon that blogs have become. Thus, she welcomes the reader to at once appreciate her personal experience and the potential of the blogosphere as a medium. She knows what its like because she actually experienced it. 

Part II

Teachout motivates her readers—potential bloggers themselves—to actively participate and consume information on blogs by presenting an optimistic view of the medium’s future. “When the history of blogging is written a half-century from now, its chroniclers may yet record that the highest achievement of the Internet, a seemingly impersonal piece of postmodern technology, turned out to be its unprecedented ability to bring creatures of flesh and blood closer together.” By illustrating a new world in which communication functions on many levels, even closing the fissures blogging may bring about, Teachout motivates her audience to participate in sculpting the spaces necessary for such interaction.

For her argument to work, Teach out assumes certain values supercede others. Her claim rests upon the historical example of individuals esteeming their own preferences before the traditional mass media. Smaller more precise voices have just as much if not more quality than those on a payroll, she supposes is the widely held sentiment.

In comparison, the two examined articles broach the same subject: recorded memory. Dijck doesn’t explicitly limit her discussion to blogs—in fact, she never even brings blogs per say into the discussion—yet she describes multi-media methods of recording and sculpting one’s memories. Oftentimes her depiction of mediated memories is precisely what bloggers create on their websites. Teachout, then, fits into Dijck’s discussion about the intersection of the individual with the collective. Aggregating, recording and responding to artists’ representations of emotion or event as defined by their culture, Teachout creates her own mediated memory of the art world. She simultaneously carves out her personal place among the many competing voices and adds to the larger collective experience from where she draws her material.