“This sleight of hand is achieved, every time a reader locks onto the
Web, by stressing velocity over reflection and brevity over complexity,
preferring snippets of news and bytes of facts over lengthy discussions
and elaborate dossiers, and by diluting informed opinion with reams of
inane babble, ineffectual advice, inaccurate facts and trivial
information, made attractive with brand names and manipulated
statistics.
But the Web is an instrument. It is not to blame for our superficial
concern with the world in which we live. Its virtue is in the brevity
and multiplicity of its information; it cannot also provide us with
concentration and depth. The electronic media can assist us (do in fact
assist us) in a myriad of practical ways, but not in all, and can’t be
held responsible for that which they are not meant to do. (...)
Neither will the Web lend us bed and board in our passage through this
world, because it’s neither a resting place nor a home, neither Circe’s
cave nor Ithaca. We alone, and not our technologies, are responsible for
our losses, and we alone are to blame when we deliberately choose
oblivion over recollection. We are, however, adroit at making excuses
and dreaming up reasons for our poor choices. (...)
It is likely that libraries will carry on and survive, as long as we
persist in lending words to the world that surrounds us, and storing
them for future readers. So much has been named, so much will continue
to be named, that in spite of our foolishness we will not give up this
small miracle that allows us the ghost of an understanding. Books may
not change our suffering, books may not protect us from evil, books may
not tell us what is good or what is beautiful, and they will certainly
not shield us from the common fate of the grave. But books grant us
myriad possibilities: the possibility of change, the possibility of
illumination.”
Alberto Manguel, The Library at Night
No comments:
Post a Comment