Electronic devices, attention, and subtextual messages
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/17/fashion/17TEXT.html?_r=1&ref=technology&pagewanted=all
"Keep Your Thumbs Still When I’m Talking to You" by David Carr
This article (well, it's sort of a cross between an article and a personal opinion piece, I guess) discusses electronic device etiquette. It says what you might expect it to say: People stare into their little screens in public and with friends. Is this rude? Is it destroying social connections? Shouldn't we put our devices down more often?
Personally, I think these things should be worked out between the people who are trying to communicate with each other. I find it stressful to stare at screens and try to socialize at the same time, and I enjoy putting everything down and just sitting and taking the world in. But I don't care to tell other people what to do.
I also enjoy knitting while talking to someone and some people think that means I'm not paying attention to them, but in fact it helps me listen more closely (well, if I'm knitting something uncomplicated).
So I don't think that looking away from someone if they're talking is inherently ignoring them.
But I also know that I can't attend to two language streams at the same time, so texting while having a conversation might not be the same as knitting while having a conversation.
What really fascinates me, though, is the image that was chosen to accompany the article, which comes right after the title. A young conventionally attractive Asian woman is standing and using her electronic device, while a young conventionally attractive white man crouches in front of her, with his hand on her arm, and makes a "screeching in distress" face. Accompanied by the title "Keep Your Thumbs Still When I’m Talking to You," it seems like there is a subtextual race and gender message.
It's always been the case that there is a power dynamic involved in "who gets to divide their attention and who doesn't."
Other than that I'm not sure I can put the race and gender messages of the image into words.
Can you?
"Keep Your Thumbs Still When I’m Talking to You" by David Carr
This article (well, it's sort of a cross between an article and a personal opinion piece, I guess) discusses electronic device etiquette. It says what you might expect it to say: People stare into their little screens in public and with friends. Is this rude? Is it destroying social connections? Shouldn't we put our devices down more often?
Personally, I think these things should be worked out between the people who are trying to communicate with each other. I find it stressful to stare at screens and try to socialize at the same time, and I enjoy putting everything down and just sitting and taking the world in. But I don't care to tell other people what to do.
I also enjoy knitting while talking to someone and some people think that means I'm not paying attention to them, but in fact it helps me listen more closely (well, if I'm knitting something uncomplicated).
So I don't think that looking away from someone if they're talking is inherently ignoring them.
But I also know that I can't attend to two language streams at the same time, so texting while having a conversation might not be the same as knitting while having a conversation.
What really fascinates me, though, is the image that was chosen to accompany the article, which comes right after the title. A young conventionally attractive Asian woman is standing and using her electronic device, while a young conventionally attractive white man crouches in front of her, with his hand on her arm, and makes a "screeching in distress" face. Accompanied by the title "Keep Your Thumbs Still When I’m Talking to You," it seems like there is a subtextual race and gender message.
It's always been the case that there is a power dynamic involved in "who gets to divide their attention and who doesn't."
Other than that I'm not sure I can put the race and gender messages of the image into words.
Can you?
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Personally, spending all the time texting or checking email or whatever does strike me as rude, most of the time. I usually apologise if I find myself doing it a lot, and try to explain why I do. It's basically fidgeting, for me -- I find it hard to maintain one-on-one conversation because it drains my batteries so fast. Quickly checking my phone gives me a second out, a moment for me rather than the person I'm talking to.
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It looks to me like "Oh noes those cold-hearted WOC are oppressing me by not paying enough attention to meeeeeee! --She's probably just playing hard to get."
(That's a really creepy photo.)
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I do think it's rude to start texting in the middle of a conversation[1], but that pic doesn't make me think that's what's going on there.
[1] Mostly because I have yet to encounter somebody who can actually do it. So far every person who has done this has lost the thread of what we're talking about. I might feel differently about somebody who was truly capable of doing both at once.
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When I'm talking to you niggles at me as well. Not when we're talking or when I am talking with you. Combine that imperative title and that picture and it all comes across a little bit like 'I am entitled to your attention and to dictate what you do with your body parts while I have that attention.'
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Well, no. She's still ill-mannered. Which is where I stopped in the article, because I simply can't agree with the premise.
As for the photo? I don't know. I think I'm with
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My attention was further caught by this, down in the article:
I prefer to experience the thing itself over the experience of telling people I’m doing the thing.
And that, IME, is not limited to things you do with a smartphone. Last summer, on our Western-parks vacation, I caught myself a couple of times looking at things -- really beautiful things -- more with an eye to getting a picture of them than for really seeing them, there in the moment. Yes, it's nice to have the pictorial record, but I want the actual memories as well.
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- sigh Will using pictures of conventionally pretty young women to grab consumers' attention ever stop?
- Looks like she's getting whatever that is in her hand ready to stick in his mouth.
The article title is suggestive in an annoying way. The photo caption about woman using iPad in hot tub is also annoying. "Oh look, another sexy woman! In a sexy hot tub! With privilege and money out the wazoo! Isn't she busy? Isn't she important? ASPIRE TO THIS! (And keep reading our self-indulgent opinion wanks and buying status-laden electronic devices!)
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Showing a young person or employee ignoring an older person or boss would fit the article. But for that they should have used a cartoonish girl too.
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P.
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small aside re headline
Re: small aside re headline