To Blog or not to Blog
IF you’re reading this it must mean that you find some value in the recently discovered pastime of blogging. Personally I never was one to surf the internet in search of random information/entertainment. But the blogging culture seems to have quickly become one of ‘clicks.’ It seems that people have certain blogs they go to, be they about news, or interests, or friends or just plain hot air.
I am incouraged that Americans have again seen the value of a public forum with the free exchange of ideas, but it seems that blogs have become more of a means of exclusivism that open exchange. We go to those blogs that are related to where we are in life, unwittingly bypassing the wealth of information that could help jolt us out of our comfort zone and come face to face with ideas that make us uncomfortable. It in effect blinds us to what is happening in other parts of society. Whereas traditionally when we browse the newspaper we can’t help but come across any range of topics within our society.
Finally, many blogs serve what we seem to have an insatiable desire for: random bits of information and opinion that have very little meaning outside of thier narrow context–often meant purely for entertainment. For this reason on my blog I attempt not to gain a ‘following,’ nor to entertain, but to perhaps provoke a bit of edifying thought on some more universally implicit topics in the midst of a hectic day. A futile endeavor in modern American culture? Perhaps, but I haven’t given up yet.
Comments ( 12 )
kidding. your blogging aims seem respectable, rooted in a personal philosophy and well thought-out. unfortunately, i know better.
don't let that discourage you, though. those of us without existing public forums in which to influence thought and opinion should utilize such newfangled technologies to exactly such ends. which is the precise reason i'd disagree that blogs, in general, foster introversion and a wanderlust fraught with random bits of useless information.
blogs can serve a useful purpose by providing people with exactly the kind of info that is the MOST relevant to daily life (instead of taking what spills from general-readership forms of media). that is WHY people gravitate toward blogs that serve a purpose for them, a use heretofore untapped. believe me, you're not the first one to think of this particular blogging credo -- and that's a good thing. just hang out at www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=45 or www.andrewsullivan.com/ or www.cjrdaily.org/ to see bustling clearinghouses for useful, well-organized and vital public debate (these examples happen to relate to my profession).
he doesn't run a true blog, anyway. it's more of a hysterical, disfigured, typeface-challenged scandal of an internet beast. a blog is a quite well-behaved pet by comparison.
no one i know. the blogs you use are generally for a specific purpose ... not for random bits of pleasure/scintillation. tv, movies and other types of web sites are MUCH more efficient ways of getting that sort of thing.
the point still holds, though, that the paradox of blogs is that although they are available to all and are an open forum to people all over the globe, they end up allowing individuals to concentrate only on their narrow interests while remaining oblivious to large components of the culture. again, this can be useful and efficient for professional purposes, but it can also foster an exclusive world view.
as for those who "surf the web in search of random bits of information/pleasure," i know quite a few; granted that they are predominantly the youth. though perhaps i stand corrected in that blogs are not generally the source of such diversions.
certainly your blog fits the description of a "well-behaved pet."
www.xanga.com/groups/group.aspx?id=345512
and a much smaller group:
www.xanga.com/groups/group.aspx?id=1087292
you may notice that charity subscribes to these blogrings, so you didn't necessarily need to ask me for the web addresses. Enjoy!
"Although we seek to know why God allows certain troubles to enter our life, knowledge itself will not solve our problems." - Dr. Andrew Steinmann
I know, I'm incorrigible too.