Tuesday, September 16, 2003
Justifying a Medium...
[It] erased state lines, collapsed regions, and, by wrapping the continent in an information grid, created the possibility of a unified American discourse.I am presently experiencing that exact problem. I now feel an impelling urge to blog, whether or not I have anything worthwhile to say (sorry guys!). Nature abhors a vacuum and if there is an available medium, we will feel the need to express ourselves in it, on it or through it.But at a considerable cost. For telegraphy did something that Morse did not foresee when he prophesied that telegraphy would make "one neighbourhood of the whole country". It destroyed the prevailing definition of information, and in doing so gave a new meaning to public discourse. Among the few who understood this consequence was Henry David Thoreau, who remarked in Walden that "We are in great haste to construct a magnetic telegraph from Maine to Texas; but Maine and Texas, it may be, have nothing important to communicate.... We are eager to tunnel under the Atlantic and bring the old world some weeks nearer to the new; but perchance the first news that will leak through into the broad flapping American ear will be that Princess Adelaide has the whooping cough."
Thoreau, as it turned out, was precisely correct. He grasped that the telegraph would create its own definition of discourse; that it would not only permit but insist upon a conversation between Maine and Texas; and that it would require the content of that conversation to be different from what Typographic Man was accustomed to.