Sunday, November 22, 2009

Bill Henderson - Minutes of the Lead Pencil Club (2)

Once upon a time there was a "club" called The Lead Pencil Club. The members of this club swore off the electronic revolution as latter day Luddites. This book, published in 1996, contains some of their views. It is interesting reading today more than 10 years later.

It was still possible in 1996 to "refuse it," like literary critic Sven Birkerts says. Today we cannot refuse it unless we wish to be completely out of touch and ill-informed. I cannot conceive of a life without the internet to keep up with what is going on in the world, without blogs like this one to record my views, and a cell phone for personal AND business use. You cannot avoid voice mail. You cannot not have a computer and use it. You CAN turn off the TV, which I do frequently. You CAN avoid Blackberries and iPhones. But I DO flip thru multiple websites each day to keep with politics and culture. I cannot do without this access.

The key is to find a balance between print and digital. For someone of my age, born in print and still dedicated to print, but conversant in digital, using digital, this is certainly possible. Perhaps it is not possible for people on the extreme sides of my age category. I really don't know.

And so I like to think that I am balanced, still reading books, not ebooks, but active in keeping up with the world on the internet.

9 comments:

Gina said...

Fred, you said it all for me. Yes, I was once one who eschewed the computer, but was forced to learn how to use one at work.

Now I too still read books which is how I found out about The Lead Pencil Cub, (Minutes of the Lead pencil club. But I can also use email, and I have a cell phone which has help me avoid numerous aggravations in my life thru missed meetings with my husband. Come to think of it, it's help him avoid numerous aggravations with me!

All the other electronic gizmos, I've managed to avoid, although I still can't resist the temptation of an old movie on TV late during a sleepless night.
-Gina Westbrook

David Shaw said...

I lent my Lead Pencil Club Minutes to an old friend who was started to feel the pull to Luddism. I was a hard core Luddite from 1988-1999 when I finally caved and bought a Mac ... at first I only used the Internet to communicate with the small number of people I was still working with (Luddism was career suicide for a graphic designer ... I even threw out my Letraset and a useable photostat camera). In 2002 I became a ronin designer and started spending way too much time on message boards and eventually Facebook ... never was much of a blogger though. I inherited a cellphone from my wife (she now has an iPhone but has never touched a computer ... seems to not need it in her line of work) but I got rid of my landline and my dedicated fax number ... and now I'm rereading Bill Henderson's book. I sent him a handwritten letter but I guess he thought I'd crossed over to the Dark Side. As Timbuk 3 sang, "Maybe you had it right the first time. I will NEVER read an e-book and I pretty much gave up on television (thank you Jerry Mander and the late Neil Postman). And I don't think I'll be replacing my two computers when they are ready for the knackers. Sigh.

Anonymous said...

I have been struggling for years to write a critique of technology that is insightful, relevant, and worth publishing. I keep going back to the "Minutes of the Lead Pencil Club". I both love and hate the book. It fails, I think, to look at how the internet is changing us as a culture, though of course, it was published at the dawn of the internet. It seems at times, both silly and nostalgic. Books like Nicholas Carr's "The Shallows" do a somewhat better job, and I keep coming back to Ivan Illich and his "Tools for Conviviality." I WANT to go back to a more convivial time, but perhaps we're stuck in some Hegelian progression we can't back away from, and my book on technology is doomed from the start.

I do write more letters than I used to, though I don't receive as many. I am very fond of my pencils, my notebook, and my datebook. I toy with abandoning my financial software and going back to a ledger. Would I miss a lot if I backed out of the digital age altogether? I don't feel I would, but my freelance editing and proofreading would definitely suffer, and the little bit of writing I get published would probably be less.

I'm not even sure Pushcart Press would accept a typescript these days. I know the magazines I've written for won't.

And the strangest thing is, if I turned off the internet, quit using email, I shudder to think no one would know about it. It would be a grand gesture that may as well take place in a vacuum once you take away the possibility to tweet about it.

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