Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Quote Ninja

Finney 1
Jill Finney
RWS 100
Mr. Werry
08 September 2014
Updates, Tweets, Emails, and Blogs…
How does tweeting, blogging, texting and the endless amounts of time spent on the Internet change how we think? Do we actually get dumbed-down? Or is the Internet phenomenon producing better, more accomplished writers? In Smarter Than You Think, by Clive Thompson, specifically his article titled “Public Thinking”, he argues that the Internet has contributed to a generation that is smarter and can write more complexly than any other before them. He argues that students aren’t really getting the credit that they deserve; studies have shown that college students today are overall smarter than their parents were. Shockingly enough, this is due to social medias, and the needs to always be writing; whether it is tweeting, updates on Facebook, email, or blogging for the world to see. Kids are writing to audiences, and knowing that they have people reading their works; their writing is improving. Of course there are many arguments behind technology’s role in our lives, and Thompson’s main focus is on how it has changed our cognitive behaviors. Thompson attempts to show his audience the evolution of writing in the world by providing the readers many examples. These are not only from studies, but also personal interactions with his mother, and statistical information. He weighs the advantages of technology rather than seeing the typical view: that it’s destroying our brains. Thompson persuades us to believe that the vast increase in public writing through the inspiration of the Internet is causing a beneficial change for individuals and society as a whole. In this paper, I will go into further detail regarding multiple claims made by Thompson as well as analyze the evidence backing up those claims. Through thorough examination of this article, I can better understand the deeper meaning to Thompsons work.
            Thompson introduces his article with a short story about a young student who starts a blog. Although she centered most of her writings on the corrupt society of her home country, Kenya, she was able to reach many people through daily blog posts. Like anyone else, she thought she had “zero ideas to say” (Thompson 45), however she later discovered that with seven years of blogging not only did it lead to “a witty, passionate voice, keyed perfectly to online conversation” (Thompson 45) but also “two telephone sized books” (Thompson 46) with millions of ideas. This piece introduces the reader to the majority of Thompson’s further claims in the remainder of the article. Additionally, the piece connects with many readers. Like Okolloh, many people don’t feel very strongly about writing but knowing that a young Kenyan woman can do it, provides a sort of inspiration that others can do it as well.  Anyone, anywhere can write and be a successful writer. This strategy of intriguing the reader and connecting on a personal level is very effective and provides a solid base for the rest of Thompson’s paper.
            Finney 2
            In order to support his overall argument, that “the Internet has produced a Niagara of writing” (Thompson 43) that has created “a global culture of writers”(Thompson 50) Thompson utilizes a variety of strategies and evidence to persuade the audience into his way of thinking. He makes claims that Internet writings can “clarify our thinking” (Thompson 51). By introducing a interview Thompson did with bloggers they came to him to say, “they’ll get an idea for a blog post and sit down at the keyboard in a state of excitement…soon thinking that someone will read this as soon as its posted” (Thompson 52) thus causing the blogger to think twice about what to write. Our cognition has been altered due to the fact that an audience is now listening and reading. Founder of DuckDuckGo Gabriel Weinburg presents the idea of defending your papers through a phenomenon known as “hand-waveyness” (Thompson 53), essentially no one wants to crash and burn but the desperate need to try and make a failed paper presentable to an audience, you hand wave. “Even if I was publishing it [a blog, article] to no one, it’s just the threat of an audience…if someone could come across it [the paper] in my name, I have to take it more seriously” (Thompson 54), Thompson uses this Weinburg quote to back up his cognition theory. Literally due to the fact that majority of writing is now publicly written, the cognitive process has altered significantly in all of us.


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