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The increased quantity of carry-on items for our flight through life, he says, reflects "the tendency of our society to dispense with sources of shared stability -- the long-term job, neighborhoods, unions, family dinners -- and transform us into autonomous free agents."
The Walkman, introduced in 1979, Hine says in an e-mail, "probably set the precedent; it allowed people to be physically in a space, but mentally detached. The plethora of 'communications' devices we carry are also tools of isolation from the immediate environment. And, in the words of the recruiting ad, we each become 'an army of one' carrying all our tools of survival through a presumably hostile world."
It's the perfect posture for the Age of Insecurity. We fret about our jobs, families, country, manhood or womanhood, ability to be a good parent. We believe someone is out to get us. And to get our things. So, like the homeless, we carry our stuff with us. Just in case something, or anything, happens.
If wealth is judged by freedom and freedom is the state of being unencumbered, then we are a poor and burdened people.
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torsdag, februari 09, 2006
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2 kommentarer:
Kände du dig träffad av artikeln för din oro över eventuell brist på manlighet på grund av avsaknad av hockeyintresse? Do you believe that someone is out to get you eller?
Hmm...you got me!
Fast mest träffad blev jag av "physically in a space, but mentally detached".
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