[identity profile] jauntyalan.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] poptimists
I was originally going to write quite a long bit about this book, but then I thought I might save that up and just ask YOU LOT if any of you have read it.

Not everything in it rings true, but the core observations (mass/pop culture is getting more cognitively demanding), and the fundamental inference (our brains WANT to be challenged) are things that everyone here will probably agree with. It's never a good thing to agree wholeheartedly with an argument/book, at least it feels wrong/uncomfortable to me, but my disagreements here are minor to trivial.

indeed the "mass/pop culture is getting more cognitively demanding" thing is so obviously true, but he actually goes into quantifiable specifics in a nice way. plus it's nice to have someone actually bloody well saying so forthrightly and in public, rather than the usual crap "going to hell in a lowest common denominator handbag"

he doesn't actually touch on music much at all (i'm going back to find that bit, cos there was something ironically slightly rockist about singles v albums he mentions) but it's still poptimism.

anyway. anyone?

Date: 2006-06-22 11:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexmacpherson.livejournal.com
Oh I haven't heard of that book - it looks interesting.

I'm not sure if mass/pop culture is getting more cognitively demanding in the sense that what it consists of is more cognitively demanding - but as a monolithic thing in itself which needs to be engaged with, it certainly is (and it needs to be engaged with properly! rather than the lazy opposite-ends-of-spectrum discourse currently on offer, ie outright dismissal vs "postmodernism blaaaargh")

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