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Conversations with creators and thinkers who are charting the way forward in a tech-saturated society. In our shift to a digital future, we need alternatives to Big Tech. Homepage: techtonic.fm
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April 26, 2021: Dennis Glover, author, "Factory 19"
Listen to this show:
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Tonight: Dennis Glover, author, "Factory 19"
Links:
• Factory 19, by Dennis Glover, published by Black Inc. (Buy the book here, and not Amazon!)
• DennisGlover.net: "Dennis Glover is an Australian writer and novelist. The son of factory workers, Dennis grew up in the working class Melbourne suburb of Doveton before studying at Monash University and King’s College Cambridge where he was awarded a PhD in history. He has worked for two decades as an academic, newspaper columnist, policy adviser and speechwriter to Australia’s most senior political, business and community leaders."
• Dennis Glover interview on NPR with Scott Simon (November 2017) about his novel The Last Man in Europe.
• Living Like It's 99: No Social Media, No Smartphone (by Gregory Alvarez, Feb 19, 2021): "Technology and progress are awesome things, but they have their bad side too. The funny thing is that we are so addicted to them that it requires a tremendous effort just to realize it. ... Life is not just more peaceful without a smartphone, it has great effects on your productivity too. ... Opening your phone every time you are bored kills your creativity and imagination. I’ve been on both sides of the mirror, and this side is better. Don’t take my word for it, just try and see for yourself. After 3 years without social media and 2 years without a smartphone, I can tell you that I may go back to social media one day, however I will never have a smartphone again."
• From He Quit the Internet 2 Months Before the Pandemic (by Charlie Warzel in the NYT, March 10, 2021) - about Aron Rosenberg turning off all digital devices for a year:
That’s when he saw a change. Most obvious was his ability to engross himself in books for long periods of time. Academic texts that had previously felt onerous were unlocked. He started following the trail of endnotes and exploring more obscure works that he might have otherwise overlooked.The article also quotes Gabriel García Márquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude about a village getting its first phone: “It was as if God had decided to put to the test every capacity for surprise and was keeping the inhabitants of Macondo in a permanent alternation between excitement and disappointment, doubt and revelation, to such an extreme that no one knew for certain where the limits of reality lay.”
“I realized just how much reliance on the internet caused me to privilege what was simply new over more durable ideas,” he said. He began rereading books and articles, and found himself drawing connections he’d missed before. It dawned on him that for most of his life he’d been engaged in what some scientists refer to as “surface reading,” a superficial way of absorbing ideas that results in low retention. With his brain less clouded by digital input, he was able to engage in “deep reading,” which is believed to lead to better comprehension and increased empathy.
Artist | Track | Images | Approx. start time | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dennis Glover discusses his novel "Factory 19," imagining a community banning all digital devices & tech invented after 1948. | ||||||||||
Tomaš Dvořák | Game Boy Tune | |||||||||
Mark's intro | ||||||||||
Interview with Dennis Glover | 0:04:09 (Pop-up) | |||||||||
Mark's comments | 0:35:19 (Pop-up) | |||||||||
She Drives Me Crazy (Percusapella) GE remix | 0:54:37 (Pop-up) |
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Listener comments!
ultradamno:
Otis:
DjLorraine:
Ken From Hyde Park:
listener james from westwood:
PaulRobeson1920:
David in London:
Hello Mark and all assembled tech-groovers.
BNowB.:
Bas NL:
Constance De Witt:
Dvs:
Webhamster Henry:
Mark Hurst:
Carmichael:
B R M:
StringOFperils:
Mark Hurst:
Mark Hurst:
herb.nyc:
ultradamno:
herb.nyc:
StringOFperils:
Mark Hurst:
listener james from westwood:
Fox:
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
melinda:
Mark Hurst:
Webhamster Henry:
PaulRobeson1920:
In his own words! Paul Robeson speaks on these issues!
“The union makes us strong” and brings a decent standard of living for laboring people (work union live better)... now today less than 9% of public sector workers are unionized
herb.nyc:
ultradamno:
Mark Hurst:
herb.nyc:
WR:
StringOFperils:
David in London:
PaulRobeson1920:
“Man is an imitative creature”
Yeah it went down hill because we
Cannot have guns and better...
Ken From Hyde Park:
Webhamster Henry:
PaulRobeson1920:
David in London:
mrdonutsu:
PaulRobeson1920:
The typos. Typing quickly
Here. Free-forming my comments
Mark Hurst:
Constance De Witt:
herb.nyc:
Webhamster Henry:
mrdonutsu:
ultradamno:
(Murakami Whywolf))):
All that comraderie sounds nice (if you're not autistic), but you can do that on your ow time—invoking it seems analogous to invoking the love get allowed to feel each other during war.
Let's automate _all_ those jobs out of existence and put all of us on Relief, just like the Surrealists and Pigmeat Markham called-for.
ed:
(((Murakami Whywolf):
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
psychedelicsalon.com...
...with consideration of both sides of it - including the environmental impact of data-mining. But the potentntial for Artists & Creatives to reclaim profit from Distribution is intriguing.
ultradamno:
PaulRobeson1920:
No going back. We have a deep well of lessons and horror to draw from. A well that must never be exhausted.
PaulRobeson1920:
StringOFperils:
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
Webhamster Henry:
(Murakami Whywolf))):
Remembering is very different to nostalgia, which in practice tends to be more-or-less worship…which is the inability or refusal to see fault.
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
imgur.com...
Fredericks:
If not, what word did he use?
melinda:
Mark Hurst:
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
www.austinauction.com...
Tom from Cotati:
Ken From Hyde Park:
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
mrdonutsu:
DjLorraine:
Webhamster Henry:
ed:
StringOFperils:
Webhamster Henry:
Tom from Cotati:
coelacanth∅:
etc
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
ed:
Tom from Cotati:
chresti:
Webhamster Henry:
coelacanth∅:
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
We just want something that is WORTH working for. (In terms of wages to cost of living, health - &tc.)
ultradamno:
Tom from Cotati:
PJ:
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
Marci:
(((Murakami Whywolf):
There was very little disagreement about that, much as how both American Capitalism and Russian Bolshevism were dedicated to Production! Above All, and screw both traditions and the environment.
coelacanth∅:
PJ:
melinda:
Webhamster Henry:
PJ:
WR:
Tom from Cotati:
Taking on tons of debt by buying up all their competitors did not help any, though.
chresti:
earthwalker:
Face to Face days were better !
ultradamno:
chresti:
?:
True sense of community.
I thought it was crap but now I know. But even in the early seventies you could tell the pollution was brutal. Smokestacks everywhere prior to the EPA making a huge difference (along w de industrialization naturally)
Bitcoin. Omg. What a waste of energy in keeping with the degenerate spirit of the age of murdering the planet so you can pack money into offshore banks.
Nostalgia literally is the pain of looking back
coelacanth∅:
Bas NL:
StringOFperils:
Ken From Hyde Park:
ultradamno:
Bas NL:
chresti:
PJ:
melinda:
DjLorraine:
earthwalker:
coelacanth∅:
The Butterman:
Webhamster Henry:
Bas NL:
ultradamno:
Megaroni:
earthwalker:
That was fast
(Murakami Whywolf))):
Note: not all L.E.D. light-bulbs are 'smart'; most aren't, in fact.
PJ:
melinda:
coelacanth∅:
Tom from Cotati:
Also cars that try to do anything more than drive and play the radio.
StringOFperils:
ultradamno:
(((Murakami Whywolf):
earthwalker:
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
A useful analogy it may seem for alll the Digital 'Improvements' - as for Audio. We get seduced by new benefits - & do not appreciate the benefits - even the Artfulness - of what was already there!
There is also over-engineering - on a similar track. & - deliberate market obsolescence ! Making an Operating System not reverse-compatible with previous ones is a *choice*... & I suggest a Fail.
PJ:
Tom from Cotati:
(Murakami Whywolf))):
PaulRobeson1920:
This is Years before the public face of lynching emerged in 1955 with Emmitt Till and his mother demanding an open casket!
And always Remember the Vietnam conflict 1954-1975. We cannot have guns & Butter. War is profoundly Immoral.
We need a department of Peace and a department of music! funded on Par with the defense department! We demand Massive expenditures on Livingly as opposed to killingry! Forever more.
Where are we trending? Towards a brotherhood of man. I sware it’s not too late.
While involved in one we invariably neglect the other.
earthwalker:
PJ:
Old Dave:
Steve:
DjLorraine:
melinda:
PaulRobeson1920:
David in London:
melinda:
Bas NL:
ultradamno:
Webhamster Henry:
Mark Hurst:
chresti:
Mark Hurst:
adampsyche:
earthwalker:
Mark Hurst:
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
Power to the Poor & the Peaceful !
This ultimately is my Politics.
Webhamster Henry:
listener 126464:
ultradamno:
Tom from Cotati:
chresti:
Webhamster Henry:
coelacanth∅:
Ken From Hyde Park:
Mark Hurst:
Tom from Cotati:
Webhamster Henry:
coelacanth∅:
Steve Schwartz:
Mark Hurst:
PJ:
(((Murakami Whywolf):
chresti:
Mark Hurst:
chresti:
WR:
Revolution Rabbit Nov63:
- because there's really good ideas & advances there
...but they forgot they were for LIGHTING for PEOPLE... which was perhaps a more human Craft !
Perhaps they can address that...
Yerknow it's like the record companies going from weirdos to bean-counters...
Mark Hurst:
(Murakami Whywolf))):
Webhamster Henry:
Otis:
(((Murakami Whywolf):
Record companiers were (or, more usually, employed) weirdos only sporadically most of their existences, and routinely only from (maybe) 1965-1972.