The art of distraction: Sebastian Smee's Quarterly Essay
- Written by Stephanie Trigg, Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor of English Literature, University of Melbourne
Review: Quarterly Essay, Net Loss, by Sebastian Smee
Guilty as charged. Yes, I spend too much time on social media. Yes, I have become more easily distracted. Yes, I have given up too much personal information to various apps and websites over the years. And yes, I have read a number of articles that articulate precisely how foolish, or at least, misguided this behaviour is.
And so when I opened up Sebastian Smee’s Quarterly Essay, Net Loss: The Inner Life in the Digital Age, I was primed to feed my own anxiety as I read his confessions: first, about how much time he spends on his phone, checking messages, listening to podcasts, watching videos, keeping an eye on Twitter and the news; and second, how conscious he is that he has given over various degrees of information about himself to the various interfaces and apps that relentlessly market this information on to other agencies in order to market other products back to the reduced versions of our selves we willingly project online.
Read more: Addicted to social media? Try an e-fasting plan
Authors: Stephanie Trigg, Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor of English Literature, University of Melbourne
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