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The DE-VOICING OF SOCIETY: WHY WE DON'T TALK TO EACH OTHER ANY MORE
 
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The DE-VOICING OF SOCIETY: WHY WE DON'T TALK TO EACH OTHER ANY MORE [Hardcover]

John Locke (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 9, 1998

The Information Age has arrived -- but not in person. Technology is overwhelming us with information, much of it unwanted, driving out the sound of human voices. We now spend our days exchanging factoids, often in print, leaving us little time to "just talk." But it's ordinary social talking, including gossip and small talk, that keeps us together. If we lose these intimate forms of self-expression, says John Locke, we lose more than we realize.

Talking, like the grooming of apes and monkeys, is the way we build and maintain relationships. People in relationships are able to trust and to help each other. Our great-grandparents wouldn't make a deal with someone they couldn't look in the eye, shake hands with, or talk to face-to-face. Our voices gave us identity. But then a variety of factors changed society: the growth of cities, followed by suburbanization, left us living in places where we don't know or care about our neighbors; then we began to bank and shop by computer, to work from our homes, to live alone or in gated communities. The tradition of communities gathering to publicly discuss and debate important issues seems to be giving way to isolated individuals communicating electronically from the privacy of their homes. In every aspect of our lives, vocal intimacy is on the wane. To compensate, we turn on TV and radio talk shows to hear other people talk. Talking has become America's leading spectator sport.

All of these developments are part of the "devoicing" of society. Without intimate conversation, we can't really know others well enough to trust them or work with them harmoniously. We also lose track of our own selves -- our sense of humor, our own particular way of looking at things. Our society is poorer and more fragile for being voiceless.

Written with wit and intelligence, The De-Voicing of Society is a provocative look at the world we live in. Thought-provoking and troubling in its implications, it will leave readers wanting to ring the neiahbors' doorbell and invite them over for dinner.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

John Locke sees no lack of communication in modern society. What he sees is a lack of conversation of the old-fashioned type: face-to-face chat among friends, relatives, and neighbors. It is no small thing to Locke that most of our communication is concerned with transmitting information to people we cannot see. He holds, in fact, that transmitting information, as we presently think about it, is only the secondary purpose of communication. Conversation is a vital component in building enduring and worthwhile societies. This is why most of the conversation that bonds human beings involves no real exchange of hard information at all. But the present lack of bonding communications, Lock insists, is not just a problem of our modern, technology-based society. The foundations were set with both urbanization and the creation of the printing press, which for the first time allowed large-scale communication between people who never met. Cybertechnology has just thrown the process into high gear.

The book analyzes several modern phenomena to make his point, such as communities where cellular phones and e-mail are used specifically to avoid face-to-face conversation rather than to expand upon it. We risk, he says, becoming an autistic society as our computers become more versatile communicators and we become less so. His worry is that we will soon discover that "societies capable of building machines that almost pass the Turing test are in danger of producing humans that nearly fail it." While you may not agree with all of Locke's gloomy conclusions about the state of interaction and communication, his presentation of communication technology offers some clear-sighted critiques of contemporary and future pitfalls. --Elizabeth Lewis

From Publishers Weekly

While cellular phones, e-mail and Internet services proliferate, opportunities for face-to-face contact and intimate conversation are shrinking, leaving an increasingly atomized society of insulated, TV-watching individualists, laments neurolinguist Locke in this disturbing, if not exactly surprising, report. A former Harvard Medical School lecturer who teaches human communications sciences at the Univ. of Sheffield, England, Locke traces the decline of social talk to a general withdrawal from community life, the proliferation of isolating technologies and amusements and a loss of places where people can assemble. Echoing points made by Robin Dunbar's Grooming, Gossip, and the Evolution of Language, he argues that talking fulfills a biological need for species and group connection deeply rooted in our evolutionary past. This leads him to draw not always convincing parallels among human interactions, monkeys' alarm calls and our hominid ancestors' sound making. His witty analysis of the varieties of communication?gossip, self-disclosure, small talk, networking, bonding talk?reveals that talking is often not so much factually informative or intellectually complex as personal, intimate and emotional. But today, he warns, "the exchange of information is too often the reason for speech, the personal relationship relegated to a position of secondary importance." The solution? Locke suggests joining groups, curtailing time with the TV and computer monitor and opting for interpersonal activities over time-consuming jobs?possibilities that have already been much talked about.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (September 9, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0684843331
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684843339
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.3 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #343,615 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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5.0 out of 5 stars An excelent read, April 22, 2002
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"buildcompu" (Clinton, Ct USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The DE-VOICING OF SOCIETY: WHY WE DON'T TALK TO EACH OTHER ANY MORE (Hardcover)
i purchased this book from amazon after reading an article that I found while researching a topic for my term paper. I made an impulse buy... figured it would be a good read, and it in fact was. I am a computer fanatic. Both my jobs are computer oriented and i couln't be happier. While researching my topic "The Social Effects of the Internet upon Society" i discovered just how much an effect the internet has had on us all. Even if we arn't tech-heads. This is a great book for anyone who wishes to discover how different mediums are splitting us apart, and how this may affect our futures.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The problem with the Growing WWW, December 11, 2000
This review is from: The DE-VOICING OF SOCIETY: WHY WE DON'T TALK TO EACH OTHER ANY MORE (Hardcover)
I would not consider myself to be a tech junkie, but I do know my way around a computer, software, and the internet. After reading Locke's book, I was able to put into words what I could not before on where I think the internet is headed. I agree with Locke that we are losing our voice. Instead of meeting someone to talk or calling them on the telephone, we are sending them an e-mail. This is not a big problem now, but in ten years, there will be a noticeable difference in society. If society keeps going at the pace it is right now, we will lose the ability to communicate without the use of a computer. Locke's book is a wake-up call.
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