After reading Neil Postman’s, Amusing
Ourselves to Death, the chapter that caught my attention was Chapter 5, The
Peek-a-Boo World. This chapter is about
how real human to human communication has been lost by the telegraph, the
photograph, and finally, television. He
writes that we now live in a peek-a-boo world where all of our electronic
devices give us only short pops of information that are entertaining but don’t really
make sense.
Postman states that in the 1840’s, information
could only travel as fast as human beings could carry it. The written word was meaningful and relevant
to people in their lives. With the invention
of electricity, the forms of communication changed. The telegraph made information into a
commodity that didn’t need to be tied to any function. One day after Morse demonstrated the
telegraph’s ability, the first known use of the telegraph by a newspaper
occurred. People could now receive news from all over the world, not just local
news. Postman states, “The telegraph may have made the country into “one
neighborhood,” but it was
a peculiar one, populated by strangers who knew nothing but the most
superficial facts about each other”
(67).
Then came the
invention of the photograph. The name
photography means “writing with light”
(71).
Photography made it easier to record experiences and share them with someone
who was not there in person. According
to Postman, the photograph complemented the telegraphic news that came from
nowhere which gave readers facts from unknown places about strangers with
unknown faces (75). I found it very
interesting that the crossword puzzle came about at this same time because now
people had to invent ways to use all of the useless information.
Each new type of media built upon the telegraph
and the photograph to keep us from having to think and really communicate. The
invention of the television and the fact that it was brought into the home,
made this new false reality a way of life.
Postman finds it disturbing that the world as given to us by television
now seems natural. He says we have
created a neighborhood of strangers and a world of fragments (70).
I think this chapter is a nice one and it shows how over the years our technology has change and is going to continue to change. Technology is a blessing and a curse at the same time as you stated technology is only going to give us short bursts of information sometimes those small bursts are going to be misleading and make us believe the wrong thing is occurring. As our technology continues to grow we become less social people and as stated a neighborhood of strangers. If we are able to get all of our information in our homes without interacting with the world what is the incentive to go out into the world.
ReplyDeleteGood summarization of the chapter. I did the same chapter and agree with what you say. Its sort of a shame that Morse wanted to use his design to bring everyone together "like a neighborhood", but it went so far in the opposite direction. Sure, we all have access to instant information (like Facebook now), but it is all so impersonal, short, usually not able to tell what is true or fake, and usually just pointless like "a whooping cough"
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