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The Internet is NOT Killing Storytelling, Or is It?

By Tanya Paperny on Thursday, December 3, 2009 - View Comments

Sometimes I feel like a broken record.  I say it over and over again — the Internet is making people more literate, not less.  (We’ve written about this before — see Jennifer’s great post about “the new literacy” here).

Then a column like this comes along and I feel like I have to debunk it or at least go on a rant for a bit:

Click, tweet, e-mail, twitter, skim, browse, scan, blog, text: the jargon of the digital age describes how we now read, reflecting the way that the very act of reading, and the nature of literacy itself, is changing. The information we consume online comes ever faster, punchier and more fleetingly. Our attention rests only briefly on the internet page before moving incontinently on to the next electronic canapé…The internet has evolved a new species of magpie reader, gathering bright little buttons of knowledge, before hopping on to the next shiny thing. It was inevitable that more than a decade of digital reading would change the way we do it…Meanwhile, a generation is tuned, increasingly and sometimes exclusively, to the cacophony of interactive chatter and noise, exciting and fast moving but plethoric and ephemeral. The internet is there for snacking, grazing and tasting, not for the full, six-course feast that is nourishing narrative. The consequence is an anorexic form of culture.

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