What it feels like to be the last generation to remember life before the internet
The End of Absence
Technology has a lot to answer for: killing old businesses, destroying the
middle class, Buzzfeed. Technology in the form of the internet is
especially villainous, having been accused of everything from making us dumber (paywall)
to aiding
dictatorships. But Michael Harris, riffing on the observations
of Melvin Kranzberg,
argues that “technology is neither good nor evil. The most we can say about it
is this: It has come.”
Harris is the author of “The End of Absence:
Reclaiming What We’ve Lost in a World of Constant Connection,” a new book about
how technology affects society. It follows in the footsteps of Nicholas Carr,
whose “The Shallows”
is a modern classic of internet criticism. But Harris takes a different path
from those that have come before. Instead of a broad investigation into the
effects of constant connectivity on human behaviour, Harris looks at a very
specific demographic: people born before 1985, or the very opposite of the
“millennial” demographic coveted by advertisers and targeted by new media outlets.
These people, says Harris, are the last of a dying breed. “If
you were born before 1985, then you know what life is like both with the
internet and without. You are making the pilgrimage from Before to After,” he
writes. It is a nice conceit. Harris, like your correspondent, grew up in a
very different world, one with limited channels of communication, fewer forms
of entertainment, and less public scrutiny of quotidian actions or fleeting
thoughts. It was neither better nor worse than the world we live in today. Like
technology, it just was.
Being in this situation puts us in a privileged position.”If
we’re the last people in history to know life before the internet, we are also
the only ones who will ever speak, as it were, both languages. We are the only
fluent translators of Before and After.”
That means being able to notice things like the reduction of
interactions to numbers, and how that translates into quantifications of human
worth. “I think it has to do with this notion of online accountability. That
is, noticing that you actually count seems to be related to a sense of self
worth,” he says over the phone from Toronto, where he is based. “So it’s like
if a tweet gets retweeted a couple of hundred times, that must mean that my
thoughts are worthy. If my Facebook photo is ‘liked,’ that must mean I am good
looking. One of the things that concerns me about a media diet that is overly
online, is that we lose the ability to decide for ourselves what we think about
who we are.”
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