Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Generation We
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Breaking "Bonds"?
Here is an article on an NYU student who killed himself earlier in the month by leaping from the tenth floor of a library.
If you read through the comments (where the news is really @ these days), there's this gem:
"Suicide is a natural part of society. More resources for the rest of us. Sad the dude offed himself though cause he looked like the George lazenby James bond"
To which somebody else replies, "I thought he offed himself BECAUSE he looked like George Lazenby. However, I still think Timothy Dalton was the worst bond."
Fortunately someone with a Hello Kitty avatar managed to offer some more compassionate commentary, but shit-damn.
Ok, but just to get it out of the way, who was the worst Bond?
Kirby and the Crystal Shards, or, The Silently Autistic Generation
Hello everyone, glad to be able to join a stimulating discussion addressing serious questions. On to the debate. While I appreciate the force of Mr. Princen’s critiques of Kirby, I have an intuition that Mr. Princen is not quite receiving the full thrust of Kirby’s massive assertion.
But now to the heart of Kirby. “To a degree, pseudo modernism is no more than a technologically motivated shift to the cultural centre of something which has already existed.” When people text message vacuous stupidities like, “I’m on the bus,” they don’t realize that people have always communicated things like “I’m on the bus,” they just didn’t have mobile phones, so they did it with letters and telegraphs, which were better because, they were already shifting in the general direction of the cultural centre of something, or something like that.
[1] Kirby, Death of Postmodernism and Beyond. Last paragraph, “pseudo-modernism takes the world away, by creating a new weightless nowhere of silent autism.”
Friday, November 20, 2009
Post-postmodernism
One more thing about Kirby's article, and then I'll leave it alone.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
The apocalypse, or, why 2012?
But, this is the reason we even have trending topics on Twitter. Zeitgeist. Graphs pointing upwards.
I personally think cultural myths are fascinating and illustrative. And, as some of my friends were so kind as to point out, just as Y2K acted as a signpost of our increasing reliance on computers (and concomitant unease about them running our bank accounts), the 2012 apocalpyse and its associated end-of-the-world cult is yet another way to express our discomfort with the acceleration of modernity.
Here is a list of some things:
1. 9/11
2. The Millenium Force, arguably the dopest roller-coaster at Cedar Point
3. Iraq(/Afghanistan)
4. Abu Ghraib
5. Global warming
6. Hurricane Katrina
7. Food deserts
8. Sitcoms based on Twitter feeds
9. Kanye/Lady Gaga tour cancelled
10. Glenn Beck's 9/12 project
11. The state of the auto industry, generally
These things are likely to cause the apocalypse.
Also, I happen to get that young diploma in 2012. Just sayin'.
Pseudo-modernism is a terrible idea
According to wikipedia I'm part of Generation Y or Z. Terrible names. If this blog accomplishes only one thing, it will be to come up with a decent name for our generation. I believe my co-author has already provided some good suggestions. In addition, I'll throw out Generation Obama (nah, self-veto...) or maybe Generation "Word." As in, "Yo dude, Stanford just fucked up USC on their home field," and I'm like, "Word." (If necessary, feel free to substitute the sports teams of your choice in order to give the meaning of "Word" sufficient depth).
But as long as we're suggesting names, we may as well also attempt to figure out what exactly defines our generation.
How? To begin, we could describe what we're not, what general philosophies we follow, what basic assumptions we hold, what actions we are currently taking, what actions we must take in the future, what problems we face, what moves us, what we find repulsive, and nearly anything else that pops into our heads.
Granted, the authors of this blog will only be able to offer two limited perspectives on the matter, and if there are any professional qualifications necessary for defining generations, we don't have them. But that's beside the point. The point of the blog is not to come to some brilliant conclusion -- definitive statements are so passé. The point is to have a conversation about our generation. And other than this basic premise, there should be very few rules for our discussion. Presumably, as members of our generation, anything we say is in some way characteristic of our generation, and therefore we can say pretty much whatever we want. Within reason.
Of course, one may ask: who do we consider members of this generation? I won't answer that now. Maybe my co-author has more to say about that. I'll write more later.