"In the same car is another, older woman—do men not read anymore? (Seinfeld’s Jerry, defensively: “I read.” Elaine: “Books, Jerry”)—holding up a Kindle at an angle to catch the light. Unless you were an elf camped on her shoulder, what she was reading was hoarded from view, an anonymous block of pixels on a screen, making it impossible to identify its content and to surmise the state of her inner being, erotic proclivities, and intellectual caliber. She might be reading Alice Munro, patron saint of short-story writers, or some James Patterson sack of chicken feed—how dare she disguise her download from our prying eyes! And reading an e-book on an iPhone, that’s truly unsporting. It goes the other way as well. How can I impress strangers with the gem-like flame of my literary passion if it’s a digital slate I’m carrying around, trying not to get it all thumbprinty?"
James Wolcott in Vanity Fair wonders how in the digital age we will show off our our "cultural snobbery or keen connoisseurship (take your pick, depending on the degree of pretentious wankery you attribute to others)."
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Status Display Anxiety
Labels:
2000s,
books,
cultural history,
design,
movies,
music,
technology,
Wolcott
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