keith@thememorybank.co.uk on Fri, 28 Sep 2007 15:15:56 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> The death of the Author 2.0 |
I agree with you, Felix, that everyone is an author these days and that authorship, far from dying, is spreading like a rhizome fed Supergro. The problem is if anyone out there is reading or listening and, if they are in a formal sense, how much of it they actually get. So I propose as a topic 'Death of the Audience'. I offer a few scattered thoughts on this topic that have occurred to me over the years without ever coalescing into the essay I would like to write. You speak of the 'community' within which authorship variously occurs. But that is the problem. Where is it? Who are they? Sometimes, when I write an article, I can pitch it to the individual who commissioned it, an editor usually. But anything larger scale soon loses touch with an intended audience. I once asked myself if the book I was writing was 'anthropology', but I realized that if I wrote a book just for the twenty professors in my American four-field anthropology department at the time, it would be suitable for reasonably educated readers of English anywhere. So I usually write for all the inner voices competing for attention within my self. I think of these as the residue of society in all the places I have been, which is quite a lot. Or, as Edward Said once put it, history deals us so many fragments and our job is to make a narrative from them. We don't have to be consciously writing for a specific community in order for what we write to be social. Just write for yourself. I have been surprised by the regional clustering of positive responses to what I write: Scandinavia and Latin America, for example, about which I know little, but not Africa which I have devoted my life to studying, or my home country, England. But then the main thing authors experience is THE VOID. We never get any feedback or at least never enough. I have a friend called Ruth who is 80 years old and reads voraciously: novels, biographies, poetry. She writes to the authors she likes and gets back extraordinary responses: four pages hand written, invitations to dinner. She says, 'I would have thought they were too important to read my letters' and I say 'Ruth, you are the only one who writes'. It's the same with teaching. We get to know so little of what effects we have on our students. But the internet offers a small measure of salvation. Sometimes a former student writes, 'You don't know me but I sat in your class in 1991 and..." It makes all the difference to get just one of those every few years, but it doesn't add up to an objectification of the audience for our work. I have left out the fragmentation of audiences as a result of the proliferation you describe. Even here there is some compensation in the long tail phenomenon (Chris Anderson), Amazon's discovery that they make as much money for a million books that sell less than 100 copies as they do from blockbusters. the result is that our books never go out of print and every now and then one of them takes off unexpectedly, not your or mine, but often enough to keep us in the game against all the evidence that there is no audience for what we write. I once moderated a list like this one. People would 'author' long self-involved posts to which no-one responded. Sometimes, they would write to me in a panic, asking if they had been cut off from the list. I would say, 'Not at all. You just have to put more effort into figuring out what it takes to get anyone to respond.' Keith # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@kein.org and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org