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The Blogosphere as Coffeehouse, continued:
While the coffeehouse
culture focused more on art and literature than on politics (the
Viennese papers would run significant sections of original literary
works and essays. A prominent fuellitonist could become a celebrity
in the city.), that is a difference in the timespolitics are
more central to our existence now, and in their self-destructive
pursuit of avant-garde status, music and art have rendered themselves
irrelevant to most peoples lives. And blogs are not solely
about politicsyou can equally find discussions of the classics,
economics, history, religion, cognitive science, drug research,
and probably any other topic you can think of.
Different coffeehouses would serve different clienteles, and would
thus have their own specializations. One might be known as the bohemian
haunt, another for dramatists and poets, a third for philosophers,
a fourth for politicians and writers. Similarly, the blogosphere
has organized, or at least is in the process of organizing itself
into nodes, which each cater to a particular interest.
Blogging has restored
the public intellectual sphere that has been lost for most in America.
(As was shown by the general irrelevance and obscurity of most of
those cited in the recent book about public intellectuals.) It provides
the chance for thinkers from all over the country to gather together
and exchange thoughts, bounce ideas off each other, and to find
out what others are thinking. The Viennese coffeehouses served the
same cultural functionblogging is this same phenomenon writ
large.
Both served a
relatively small population of self-described elites, but through
the quality of minds present and the cross fertilization of ideas
nurtured by it, the blogosphere can have an influence out of proportion
to its number of readers. But even if it has no effect on society
at large, the blogosphere still provides an intellectual home for
its denizens, a place to go to hear the latest political developments
and to find out whats going on in the world, in the largest
sense.
Just as the coffeehouses
didthey existed and flourished not because of any product
they produced or power they had, but because they provided a benefit
to those who frequented them. I dont know if blogging will
ever make anyone any money, but I think it will still survive, because
people like it. They like doing it, and there is value in it for
the participants.
Link posted by Douglas Turnbull:
http://beautyofgray.blogspot.com/2002_05_12_beautyofgray_archive.html
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