Monday, December 29, 2025

Media in Review

    Before I landed on "media," I tried and failed in two other units of reading. They were science and Cormac McCarthy Books. For science, it's visible on the page that I made it through a few books, but I found the majority of the books on my list boring or too complex for me. I can't remember most of them at the moment, but I remember one was Energy and Civilization, by Vaclav Smil. Maybe just not the right time. Maybe I am just not that interested in reading about science. For Cormac McCarthy, I loved All the Pretty Horses and The Crossing, but I could not get through Cities of the Plain or Blood Meridian. So I moved to the next category on my list, media, and I wanted to do it in chronological order to cover the last century of media studies as technology advanced. 

    This is what I read (with failures crossed out):

In October, I also watched Ways of Seeing, a TV show hosted by John Berger, which aired in 1972 on BBC. I had actually read the book a couple years ago and had always been interesting in watching the show, since it talked about so much visual material. The show was excellent. I think it is a masterwork, using the history of European oil painting, 1500-1900, as a Trojan Horse to deliver an argument about capitalism and commercial society. He starts with painting, and end with advertising, and shows how the same techniques in painting have been applied to modern ads. But in the modern day, these works of art don't seek to enhance the prestige of the owner of the art, but to sell goods and services to the viewers of the art via publicity, creating feelings of envy and desire. Those feelings wouldn't exist to the same extent in a society without social mobility like Renaissance Europe, but are widespread today. Something I hadn't picked up on in the book was the other side of it--that oil paintings were a way to make art a moveable commodity in Europe, whereas much previous art was sculpture, architecture, mural, or mosaic, attached to a place. And in the case of religious art, which dominated Europe in the Middle Ages, it was meant to glorify God, not man. The Renaissance changed that.
    
    For this post, I think I will address a couple of the themes that came up in my readings and my thoughts on them.

Reproduction of Art and Letters
    This came up again and again. One of the most important innovations in the last six centuries is the ability to reproduce through "copying machines." The first of these machines was the printing press, invented by Gutenberg in the 15th century, initiating an era of copied letters. It was followed by photography four centuries later, used to copy images. Film allowed for the reproduction of actions in moving images as well. Television and the internet allowed for mass communication of copied letters and images.
    Walter Benjamin is the main thinker on the effects of reproduction on art, and McLuhan is the main thinker about the effect of reproduction on letters. John Berger does excellent synthesis of both their ideas in Ways of Seeing. Reproduction ended the long tradition of Western painting that emphasized realistic depictions of individuals, especially in portraits of the rich, as ways to immortalize them and display status. Once photography was possible, there wasn't much point in painting realistic portraits since photographers could do it much quicker and cheaper. Religious art and architecture retained their value since there was more to their value than their authenticity, which would be diminished in copies. For literature, once copyists were no longer necessary, the authorship of a work was emphasized much more, along with citations and references to earlier works. That also helped give rise to religious literalism. Whereas literalism doesn't make a lot of sense when you read a Bible that you copied with your own hands or was copied by someone else in your monastery whose mistakes were still visible, printed copies of the Bible inspire more belief in their infallibility as standardized texts.

The Effects of Changes in Media on Politics and Society
        Almost all the authors I read, but most of all McLuhan, were concerned about the effects of different media on politics and society. They all analyzed how manuscripts, print, painting, photography, television, radio, film, or social media have affected and are affecting our minds. I won't go into that more here since I've covered it so much in my posts except to say that it is clear that "the medium is the message." There is no denying that the medium by which an individual or a society received information or entertainment affects the way that they understand it. And conversely, the medium by which an artist or a reporter or a politician or a writer expresses themselves affects the output and message of what they express. It is hard to make a normative argument for any medium being "good" or "bad" since each medium promotes or diminishes certain values. 

Alienation
    The more modern authors are all very concerned with social alienation due to social media, and the first author that dealt with that seriously was Baudrillard. Media can connect people when it forms a connection where none existed, before but an unexpected result of media is to also replace and therefore degrade communications between people who were already connected. This effect is most pronounced today from social media replacing real-life interactions, causing tremendous social alienation across the world where people use social media. 
    Alienation is the reason I was interested in completing a unit on media, because I feel that the alienating effects of social media are some of the most important phenomena happening right now. After reading these books, I feel more grounded in understanding how media can connect or alienate us, but I don't feel that much closer to solutions in my own life. I feel like I need to re-engage with social media on terms that focus on connecting with people, rather than just turning it into TV. Wasting time on an endless scroll is not useful. I miss old Twitter, pre-Musk, which made my scrolling feel more productive since it was full of smart people posting their work. That Twitter has been dead for a while now. I think I need to just recognize when my endless scrolling is just a time filler and find better time filler. Even as time filler, scrolling isn't good because at least I can talk about TV I've watched with people. It's a lot harder to connect over a meme or a short video.

Friday, December 26, 2025

Everything is Television by Derek Thompson

     I am finishing out my media studies with a couple of essays by Derek Thompson, including “All the Sad Young Terminally Online Men” and “The End of Thinking,” but primarily I was interested in “Everything is Television” which is the basis for this blog post.
     Like everyone in the world since Amusing Ourselves to Death came out, Thompson is heavily influenced by Postman’s work, which is to say that everything becoming television is not good. Thompson very convincingly argues that social media has essentially turned into television. First, he points out that in a filing with the Federal Trade Commission on August 6th, Meta declared that only 7% of time on Instagram and 17% of time on Facebook is spent socializing with friends. The rest is basically spent watching videos. He also showed evidence from the Financial Times about peoples’ self-reported time spent on social media:


Podcasts are also turning into TV, with YouTube being the biggest source of podcasts, and podcasts with a video component out-growing non-video podcasts 20 times over. And then even AI is turning into TV as Meta and OpenAI are trying to get people to watch AI created channels.
     The internet could have been different. In 2008 or so, the internet was still mostly a text-based medium. But today, it is more video-based. The internet has also fractured so that people live in their own little online communities. And today, people most consume media created by “creators” and “influencers” instead of doing actual “social networking” like people used to do on the internet 15+ years ago. The turn to video is making us dumber and the turn away from people we know is making us more isolated. So now American society is funnier and lonelier than before, and while social media did it to us, those companies only followed our preferences.

Thursday, December 25, 2025

My Library

Year in Review Posts:

2024 Year in Review

2023 Year in Review Bookify Wrapped

2022 Year in Review

What I Read, Organized by Dewey Decimal Number (Year I Wrote Blog Post):

  • 1: Philosophy and Psychology
    • 15: Psychology
      • 153: Cognition and Memory
        • 153.8: Decision Making and Persuasion
          • A Curious Mind (2020)
      • 158: Applied Psychology
        • 158.1: Personal Improvement and Analysis
          • Everything is Fucked (2020)
          • Atlas of the Heart (2022)
        • 158.2: Interpersonal Relations
          • Attached (2022)
        • 158.5: Negotiating
          • Never Split the Difference (2022)
    • 19: Modern Western Philosophy
      • Philosophy of France
        • Simulacra and Simulation (2025)
  • 2: Religions
    • 22: Bible
      • 222: Historical Books
        • Who Wrote the Bible? (2019)
    • 27: History, Geographic Treatment, Biography of Christianity
      • 277: North America
        • The Evangelicals (2018)
    • 29: Other Religions
      • 293: Germanic Religion
        • 293.1: Mythologies
          • Norse Mythology (2019)
      • 296: Judaism
        • From the Maccabees to the Mishnah (2019)
        • History of the Jews Volume Five (2019)
        • The Sabbath (2020)
        • The Necessity of Exile (2024)
        • 296.1: Jewish Writings
          • Maimonides (2019)
          • Hillel: If Not Now, When? (2022)
        • 296.4: Rites, Services, Practice
          • To Be a Jew (2021)
  • 3: Social Sciences
    • 30: Social Sciences; Sociology and Anthropology
      • 301: Sociology and Anthropology
        • The Open Society and Its Enemies, Volume One (2022)
        • The Open Society and Its Enemies, Volume Two (2023)
      • 302: Social Interaction
        • 302.2: Communication
          • 302.23: Media (Means of Communication)
            • Because Internet (2019)
            • Amusing Ourselves to Death (2023, 2025)
            • Combative Politics (2023)
            • The Gutenberg Galaxy (2025)
            • Understanding Media (2025)
      • 303: Social Processes
        • 303.4: Social Change
          • 303.48: Causes of Change
            • Digital Minimalism (2019)
            • The True Believer (2023)
        • 303.6: Conflict and Conflict Resolution; Violence
          • Battle: A History of Combat and Culture (2018)
          • How Civil Wars Start (2024)
      • 304: Factors Affecting Social Behavior
        • 304.2: Social Ecology
          • The World Without Us (2019)
          • The Control of Nature (2022)
        • 304.8: Movement of People
          • The Warmth of Other Suns (2024)
      • 305: Groups of People
        • 305.2: Age Groups
          • Boys and Sex (2020)
          • The Anxious Generation (2025)
        • 305.4: Women
          • Men Explain Things to Me and Other Essays (2019)
          • Women & Power (2019)
          • From Eve to Dawn: The History of Women in the World Volume One (2019)
          • Dear Ijeawele (2019)
          • Invisible Women (2020)
          • The Second Sex (2023)
        • 305.5: Class
          • Stayin' Alive (2018)
          • Nickel and Dimed (2022)
        • 305.8: Ethnic and National Groups; Racism, Multiculturalism
          • Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria (2019)
          • Exile: Portraits of the Jewish Diaspora (2020)
          • The Color of Law (2020)
          • How to Be an Antiracist (2020)
          • El laberinto de la soledad (2025)
          • The Life of Jews in Poland before the Holocaust (2025)
      • 306: Culture and Institutions
        • Our Towns (2019)
        • The Right Side of History (2019)
        • 306.3: Economic Institutions
          • The Two-Income Trap (2019)
          • Leisureville (2019)
          • The Sirens' Call (2025)
        • 306.7: Relations Between the Sexes, Sexualities, Love
          • The Joy of Sexus (2019)
          • The State of Affairs (2022)
          • Becoming Cliterate (2021)
      • 307: Communities
        • 307.1: Planning & Development
          • Walkable City (2019)
    • 32: Political Science
      • 320: Political Science
        • Abundance (2025)
        • 320.1: The State
          • Prisoners of Geography (2019)
          • Political Order and Political Decay: From the Industrial Revolution to the Globalization of Democracy (2023)
        • 320.5: Political Ideologies
          • 320.54: Nationalism
            • Imagined Communities (2023)
            • Nations and Nationalism Since 1780 (2023)
            • Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention (2024)
          • 320.56: Racism
            • Bring the War Home (2023)
        • 320.9: Political Situation and Conditions
          • Rise and Kill First (2019)
          • Disorder (2022)
          • The Origins of Political Order: From Prehuman Times to the French Revolution (2023)
      • 321: Political Systems
        • 321.8: Republic
          • The Great Experiment (2022)
        • 321.9: Totalitarianism
          • The Origins of Totalitarianism (2023)
      • 323: Civil and Political Rights
        • 323.0: Civil Rights
          • King: A Life (2024)
        • 323.4: The State and the Individual
          • Escape From Freedom (2025)
      • 324: The Political Process
        • 324.2: Political Parties
          • American Carnage (2019)
          • Breaking the Two-Party Doom Loop (2023)
        • 324.9: Biography and History
          • What It Takes (2022)
      • 327: International Relations
        • Disunited Nations (2021)
        • 327.1: Foreign Policy and Specific Topics in International Relations
          • Governing the World Without World Government (2023
        • 327.5: Asia
          • The Long Game (2022)
          • The Question of Palestine (2024)
        • 327.7: North America
          • Beneath the United States (2018)
          • War on Peace (2018)
          • Destined for War (2019)
          • Diplomacy (2023)
      • 328: The Legislative Process
        • Kill Switch (2021)
    • 33: Economics
      • 330: Economics
        • Progress and Poverty (2022)
        • 330.1 Theory
          • The Worldly Philosophers (2019)
          • Keynes Hayek (2020)
          • Capitalism, Alone (2023)
        • 330.9 Economic Geography and History
          • Shutdown (2022)
          • The Great Transformation (2024)
          • 330.95: Europe
            • The Wages of Destruction (2024)
          • 330.95: Asia
            • Red Flags (2022)
          • 330.96 Africa
            • Botswana: A Modern Economic History (2022)
          • 330.97: North America
            • Americana (2018)
      • 331: Labor Economics
        • A Collective Bargain (2022)
        • Catch and Kill (2019)
      • 332: Finance
        • Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World (2019)
        • The Dollar Trap (2019)
        • Secrets of the Temple (2019)
        • Debt: The First 5,000 Years (2019)
        • The Future of Money (2022)
        • The Code of Capital (2022)
        • The Euro: How a Common Currency Threatens the Fate of Europe (2022) 
      • 333: Economics of Land & Energy
        • 333.7: Land, Recreational and Wilderness Areas, Energy
          • The Rent is Too Damn High (2019)
          • Zoned in the USA (2022)
          • Arbitrary Lines (2022)
          • Encounters With the Archdruid (2023)
          • Indian Mounds of Wisconsin (2023)
        • 333.9: Hydrospheric, Atmospheric, and Biospheric Resources
          • Cadillac Desert (2022)
      • 336: Public Finance & Taxation
        • 336.2: Taxation
          • The Myth of Millionaire Tax Flight (2019)
          • The Triumph of Injustice (2019)
      • 338: Production
        • Jump-Starting America (2019)
        • 338.2: Mineral Extraction
          • The Prize (2018)
        • 338.7 Business Enterprises
          • Bad Blood (2020)
          • Empire of Pain (2021)
        • 338.8: Monopolies; Trusts
          • Goliath (2019)
        • 338.9: Economic Development and Growth
          • How Asia Works (2019)
      • 339: Macroeconomics and Related Topics
        • The Inclusive Economy (2019)
        • Evicted (2023)
    • 34: Law
      • 342: Constitutional and Administrative Law
        • America's Constitution: A Biography (2018)
        • The Law of the Land (2020)
        • Reading the Constitution (2024)
        • The Quartet (2024)
        • The Federalist Papers (2024)
      • 344: Labor, Social Service, Education, Cultural Law
        • The Rights of Nature (2022)
      • 347: Courts and Procedure
        • 347.7: North America
          • 347.73: United States
            • The Enigma of Clarence Thomas (2019)
            • The Shadow Docket (2023)
      • 349: By Jurisdiction
        • A History of American Law (2021)
    • 35: Public Administration, Military Science
      • 355: Military Science
        • War Made New (2019)
        • Reconsidering the American Way of War (2019)
        • Active Defense: China's Military Strategy Since 1949 (2019)
        • American Caesar (2020)
        • How to Defend Australia (2020)
        • The Savage Wars of Peace (2021)
        • The Chinese Invasion Threat (2022)
        • Hero of Two Worlds (2022)
        • The Armed Forces Officer (2024)
        • Nuclear War: A Scenario (2025)
      • 359: Navy; Naval Science
        • Leading Marines (2019)
        • First to Fight (2020)
        • How the Few Became the Proud (2020)
        • Can't Hurt Me (2020)
    • 36: Social Problems and Services; Associations
      • 362: Social Problems of & Services to Groups of People
        • 362.5: Poor (From Social Service Perspectives)
          • Dignity: Seeking Respect in Back Row America (2019)
        • 362.8: Problems of and Services to Other Groups
          • 362.82: Specific Problems
            • Why Does He Do That? (2020)
          • 362.88: People Affected by Criminal Acts
            • The Gift of Fear (2019)
      • 363: Other Social Problems and Services
        • 363.1: Public Safety Programs
          • 363.12: Transportation
            • Right of Way (2023)
            • Crash Course: If You Want To Get Away With Murder, Buy A Car (2020)
      • 364: Criminology
        • Corruption in America (2019)
      • 365: Penal Institutions and Other Detention Institutions
        • Games Criminals Play (2025
      • 368: Insurance
        • The Ten-Year War (2022)
    • 37: Education
      • 371: Schools and Their Activities, Special Education
        • Polyglot (2025)
      • 373: Secondary; Academic; Preparatory
        • Columbine (2019)
    • 38: Commerce, Communications, Transportation
      • 385: Trains and Railroads
        • Last Train to Paradise (2018)
    • 39: Customs, Etiquette, Folklore
      • 394: General Customs
        • America's First Cuisines (2024)
  • 4: Language
    • 40: Language
      • 409: Geographic Treatment and Biography
        • Empires of the Word (2022)
  • 5: Natural Sciences and Mathematics
    • 50: Science
      • 501: Philosophy and Theory
        • The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (2025)
    • 53: Physics
      • 530: Physics
        • Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! (2018)
    • 55: Earth Sciences and Geology
      • 553: Economic Geology
        • Salt: A World History (2019)
      • 557: North America
        • 557.3: United States
          • Annals of the Former Earth (2022)
    • 57: Life Sciences, Biology
      • 577: Ecology
        • 577.6: Aquatic Ecology, Freshwater Ecology
          • The Death and Life of the Great Lakes (2023)
      • 579: Microorganisms, Fungi, and Algae
        • 579.5: Fungi
          • Entangled Life (2022)
  • 6: Technology
    • 61: Medicine and Health
      • 613: Personal Health and Safety
        • 613.9: Birth Control, Reproductive Technology, Sex Hygiene, Sexual Techniques
          • Come as You Are (2022)
      • 616: Diseases
        • 616.8 Diseases of the Nervous System and Mental Disorders
          • The Reason I Jump (2019)
      • 618: Gynecology and Pediatrics
        • 618.2: Pregnancy
          • Cribsheet (2019)
    • 62: Engineering and Allied Operations
      • 629: Other Branches
        • Mission to Mars (2019)
    • 64: Home and Family Management
      • 641: Food and Drink
        • Why We Love Dogs, Eat Pigs, and Wear Cows (2019)
        • Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat (2019)
        • Kitchen Confidential (2020)
      • 646: Sewing, Clothing, Management of Personal and Family Life
        • Modern Romance (2018)
    • 65: Management and Auxiliary Services
      • 651: Office Equipment and Methods
        • Warfighting (2019)
      • 658: Management
        • The Culture Map (2020)
        • Shackleton's Way (2025)
  • 7: The Arts
    • 72: Architecture
      • 725: Public Structures
        • Suburban Nation (2020)
    • 75: Painting
      • 759: History, Geographic Treatment, Biography
        • 759.9: Other Geographic Areas
          • 759.94: Europe
            • Ways of Seeing (2023)
    • 78: Secular Forms of Vocal Music 
      • 782: General Principles and Musical Forms
        • Born to Run: The Autobiography (2019)
    • 79: Recreational and Performing Arts
      • 791: Public Performances
        • 791.4: Film, Radio, and Television
          • Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination (2020)
          • The Office (2020)
          • Cue the Sun! (2025)
      • 792: Stage Presentations, Theatre
        • 792.7: Variety Shows and Theatrical Dancing
          • 700 Sundays (2019)
          • Bossypants (2019)
      • 796: Athletic and Outdoor Sports and Games
        • 796.3: Ball Sports
          • 796.33: Inflated Ball Driven By the Foot
            • Belichick (2018)
            • Head Ball Coach (2022)
          • 796.35: Ball and Stick Sports
            • Astroball (2019)
        • 796.4: Olympic Sports
          • 796.42: Track Events, Running
            • Born to Run (2022)
        • 796.5: Outdoor Leisure
          • 796.51: Walking
            • On Trails (2020)
  • 8: Literature
    • 81: English (North America)
      • 813: American Fiction
        • 813.5: 20th Century
          • A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms (2019)
          • A Game of Thrones (2019)
          • A Clash of Kings (2019)
          • A Storm of Swords (2019)
          • Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (2019)
          • A Feast for Crows (2019)
          • A Dance With Dragons (2019)
          • Dune (2020)
          • All the Pretty Horses (2025)
          • The Crossing (2025)
          • The Caine Mutiny (2025)
        • 813.6: 21st Century
          • Fire & Blood (2019, 2021)
          • The Heads of Colored People (2019)
          • The World of Ice & Fire (2020)
          • Leviathan Wakes (2021)
          • Caliban's War (2021)
          • Abbadon's Gate (2021)
          • Fire and Blood (2021, 2019)
          • Cibola Burn (2021)
          • Nemesis Games (2021)
          • The Way of Kings (2021)
          • Words of Radiance (2021)
          • Edgedancer (2021)
          • Oathbringer (2021)
          • Dawnshard (2022)
          • Rhythm of War (2022)
          • The Final Empire (2022)
          • The Well of Ascension (2022)
          • The Hero of Ages (2022)
      • 818: Authors, American, and American Miscellany
        • Working (2019)
    • 82: English & Old English Literatures
      • 823: English Fiction
        • 823.9: Modern Period
          • 823.91: 1901-1999
            • Orlando: A Biography (2019)
            • The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe (2019)
            • Prince Caspian (2019)
            • The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (2019)
            • The Horse and His Boy (2019)
            • The Silver Chair (2019)
            • The Magician's Nephew (2019)
            • The Last Battle (2019)
            • The Silmarillion (2020)
            • The Hobbit (2020)
            • Murder on the Orient Express (2021)
            • Pillars of the Earth (2021)
            • And then There Were None (2021)
            • I, Claudius (2023)
          • 823.92: 2000-
            • Stormbird (2023)
    • 83: German Literature and Literatures of Related Languages
      • 833: German Fiction
        • Siddhartha (2019)
      • 834: German Essays
        • The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction (2025)
      • 839: Other Germanic Literatures
        • Tevye the Dairyman (2023)
    • 84: French and Related Literatures
      • 843: French Fiction
        • Le petit prince (2025)
        • L'étranger (2025)
    • 85: Italian
      • 853: Italian Fiction
        • The Leopard (2024)
    • 86: Spanish and Portuguese
      • 863: Spanish Fiction
        • Como agua para chocolate (2019)
        • Cien años de soledad (2024)
        • Pedro Páramo (2025)
        • Un verdor terrible
    • 89: Literatures of Other Languages
      • 891: Russian and East Slavic Languages
        • War and Peace (2025)
        • Doctor Zhivago (2025)
      • 895: Literatures of East and Southeast Asia
        • Spring Snow (2025)
  • 9: History and Geography
    • 90: History
      • 901: Philosophy and Theory
        • Maps of Time (2018)
        • The End of History and the Last Man (2022)
        • After the End of History (2022)
        • The Dawn of Everything (2023)
      • 909: World History
        • The Story of the Jews: Finding the Words, 1000 BCE-1492CE (2019)
        • Sapiens (2019)
        • The Story of the Jews: Belonging, 1492-1900 (2019)
        • The Crusades (2022)
    • 91: Geography and Travel
      • 910: Geography and Travel
        • The Wager (2024)
        • In the Heart of the Sea (2024)
    • 93: Ancient World
      • 930: Ancient History
        • Who Were the Ancient Israelites and Where Did They Come From (2019)
        • 930.1: Archaeology
          • Who Owns Antiquity? (2023)
      • 932: Ancient Egypt to 640
        • The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt (2018)
        • Cleopatra: A Life (2018)
      • 933: Ancient Palestine to 70
        • A History of Ancient Israel and Judah (2019
      • 934: Ancient South Asia to 647
        • India's Ancient Past (2023)
      • 937: Italian Peninsula to 476 and Adjacent Territories to 476
        • Caesar: Life of a Colossus (2018)
      • 938: Greece to 323
        • A History of the Classical Greek World (2024)
      • 939: Ancient History in Other Areas
        • 939.4: Syria
          • A History of the Ancient Near East ca. 3000-323 BC (2018)
        • 939.7: Minor African Countries
          • Carthage Must Be Destroyed (2022)
    • 94: Europe
      • 940: Europe
        • 940.2: Early Modern 1453-1914
          • The Thirty Years' War: Europe's Tragedy (2022)
          • The Swerve (2024)
        • 940.4: Military History of World War I
          • Storm of Steel (2021)
          • The Guns of August (2024)
        • 940.5: 1918-
          • 940.53: World War II
            • The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy (2018)
            • Maus (2025)
            • Resistance and Death in the Czenstochower Ghetto (2025)
          • 940.54: Military History of World War II
            • GI Jews (2019)
            • An Army At Dawn (2021)
            • Stalingrad (2021)
            • The Fall of Berlin 1945 (2021)
            • Hiroshima (2023)
            • Bloodlands (2025)
          • 940.55: 1945-1999
            • Postwar (2022)
      • 941: British Isles
        • 941.0: Historical Periods of British Isles
          • 941.06: 1603-1714, House of Stuart and Commonwealth Periods
            • A Monarchy Transformed (2018)
          • 941.08: 1837- Period of Victoria and the House of Windsor
            • Margaret Thatcher: Not For Turning (2019)
            • The Last Lion Volume One: Visions of Glory (2019)
            • The Last Lion Volume Two: Alone (2019)
            • The Last Lion Volume Three: Defender of the Realm (2020)
      • 943: Germany and Central Europe
        • 943.0 Historical Periods of Germany
          • Hitler (2019)
          • Blood and Iron (2022)
        • 943.8 Poland
          • The Jews of Poland Between Two World Wars (2025)
      • 944: France and Region
        • 944.0: France
          • 944.02: Capet and Valois 987-1589
            • A Distant Mirror (2023)
          • 944.05: First Empire 1804-1815
            • Napoleon, A Life (2019)
          • 944.06: Restoration 1815-1848; 19th Century
            • Talleyrand (2023)
      • 945: Italy and Region
        • 945.0: Italy
          • 945.09: United Italy 1870-
            • Mussolini (2022)
            • Mussolini's Italy (2023)
      • 947: Russia and Eastern Europe
        • Stalin (Volume 1: Paradoxes of Power) (2024)
        • Collapse (2025)
        • Stalin (Volume 2: Waiting for Hitler) (2025)
        • The Future Is History (2025)
      • 949: Greece and the Byzantine Empire
        • 949.5: Byzantine Empire 323-1453
          • The Lost World of Byzantium (2018)
    • 95: Asia
      • 951: China and Region
        • Age of Ambition (2018)
        • CEO, China (2018)
        • Deng Xiaoping and the Transformation of China (2019)
        • The Opium War (2019)
        • Imperial China 900-1800 (2019)
        • Inside the Mind of Xi Jinping (2019)
        • 1587: A Year of No Significance (2024)
        • The Yellow River: A Natural and Unnatural History (2024)
        • Stilwell and the American Experience in China, 1911-1945 (2024)
        • The Search for Modern China (2024)
        • The Last Stand of Fox Company (2024)
      • 952: Japan
        • Japan at War in the Pacific (2022)
      • 954: India and South Asia
        • The Last Mughal (2022)
        • The Great Partition (2023)
      • 956: Middle East
        • 956.0: Middle East
          • Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World (2018)
          • America's War for the Greater Middle East (2019)
        • 956.1: Turkey (Anatolia)
          • Osman's Dream (2023)
        • 956.7: Iraq
          • American Sniper (2019)
          • Black Hearts (2019)
          • Joker One (2020)
          • To Start a War (2023)
          • Call Sign Chaos (2024)
        • 956.9: The Levant
          • The Hundred Years' War on Palestine (2021)
          • The Only Language They Understand (2021)
      • 958: Central Asia
        • No Good Men Among The Living (2019)
    • 96: Africa
      • 966: West Africa
        • Nigeria (2022)
      • 968: South Africa
        • A History of South Africa (2019)
    • 97: North America
      • 970: North America
        • 970.0 North America
          • American Nations (2019)
          • Facing East From Indian Country (2023)
      • 971: Canada
        • The Penguin History of Canada (2018)
      • 972: Mexico, Central America, West Indies, Bermuda
        • 972.0: Mexico, Central America, West Indies, Bermuda
          • Historia Breve de la Revolución Mexicana (2019)
          • Mexico's Crucial Century, 1810-1910 (2025)
          • In the Shadow of Quetzalcoatl (2025)
          • Fifth Sun (2025)
        • 972.9: West Indies (Antilles) and Bermuda
          • The Black Jacobins (2021)
      • 973: United States
        • 973.0: United States
          • Custer Died for Your Sins (2018)
          • Harvest of Empire (2018)
          • How to Hide an Empire (2019)
          • Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom (2020)
          • Leadership: In Turbulent Times (2020)
          • Sex With Presidents (2023)
          • How the Word Is Passed (2024)
        • 973.3: Revolution and Confederation (1775-89)
          • Benjamin Franklin: An American Life (2018)
        • 973.4: Constitutional Period (1789-1809)
          • Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power (2018)
          • Washington: A Life (2018)
        • 973.7: Administration of Abraham Lincoln, 1861-1865 Civil War
          • Battle Cry of Freedom (2018)
        • 973.8: 1865-1901
          • Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution (2019)
        • 973.9: 1901-
          • Theodore Roosevelt: A Strenuous Life (2018)
          • The Looming Tower (2018)
          • Restless Giant (2018)
          • The Path to Power (2019)
          • Means of Ascent (2019)
          • Master of the Senate (2019)
          • Game Change (2019)
          • The Passage of Power (2019)
          • I Alone Can Fix It (2023)
          • A Very Thin Line (2025)
      • 974: Northeastern U.S.
        • 974.4: Northeastern U.S.
          • The Perfect Storm (2024)
        • 974.7: New York
          • The Power Broker (2019)
      • 975: Southeastern U.S. 
        • 975.9: Florida
          • From Yellow-Dog Democrats to Red-State Republicans (2019)
          • Finding Florida (2019)
          • The Everglades: River of Grass (2019)
          • Florida's Seminole Wars (2023)
      • 976: South Central U.S.
        • 976.6: Oklahoma
          • Killers of the Flower Moon (2023)
      • 977: Midwestern U.S. 
        • The Pioneers (2019)
        • 977.3: Illinois
          • Cahokia: Ancient America's Great City (2022)
          • Chicago on the Make (2024)
    • 98: South America
      • 985: Peru
        • Peru: Society and Nationhood in the Andes (2019)
      • 986: Colombia; Ecuador, Panama, Panama Canal
        • 986.1: Colombia
          • La Historia de Colombia y Sus Oligarquías (2019)
          • Bolivar (2019)
          • There Are No Dead Here (2019)



The Sirens’ Call: How Attention Became the World’s Most Endangered Resource by Chris Hayes

   This was a good final book to read in my media section that begin focusing on print, moved to TV, and then finished on the internet and social media (with some art in there too). This book is heavily influenced by Amusing Ourselves to Death, and seeks to address the same issues in an updated form. Whereas Postman analyzed a lack of attention span and serious thought as an outgrowth of TV culture and the requirement to make difficult topics fit in thirty minutes or an hour on TV, Hayes updates the issue for the modern day with TikToks and algorithms.
     Some of the writers that Hayes cites to frame the problem of modern society as being a problem of democracy- the masses deciding to rule without having the capacity to do so. Hayes is more optimistic about people having the capacity to rule themselves, and frames the problem as social media having corrupted the internet, which could have been a healthy force for democracy. Instead, social media warped democracy and created polarization, conspiracy theories, disinformation, and distrust. But above all, the issue for Hayes is attention. Our phones have become black holes of attention and completely changed the internet. Unlike commodity markets, in which high demand for wheat can be met by growing more wheat, the attention market suffers from a hard limit on supply. There are only so many eyeballs, and that means the way to get attention must be to take it from somewhere else.
     Now, instead of paying attention to people in real life, we pay attention to people on our phones, making the people in real life sadder than the phone people are made happy. We are replacing social relationships with friends and family with parasocial relationships with celebrities and influencers who see us as numbers and aren’t even made happy by our attention to them. Hayes uses the work of philosopher Alexandre Kojève and his own experience as a celebrity on TV to analyze this, which is the best part of the book, since I’ve never seen an author analyze their own celebrity like this before. He points out that we crave attention as a means to get recognition. But we can only be satisfied by recognition we get from our peers or superiors. Recognition from people we view as inferior is rarely satisfying. Social media creates less happiness on net because it takes our attention away from people in real life, who crave our recognition, and gives it to people on the internet who don’t care about our attention or recognition nearly as much. We can only have our own personhood affirmed by others who we know and respect, and so the acclaim of unnamed online masses will never be as satisfying as the acclaim of named, embodied individuals. As Hayes writes, “the star seeks recognition and gets attention,” and the rest of us get neither.
     Hayes’ big solution to the problem, among others, is to subscribe to a physical newspaper. I think this is a great idea. In the book, Hayes points out how much better the New York Times is in print than online, a comparison borne out in my personal experience. Reading the book has made me want to subscribe to a real newspaper for a weekly read. He argues print news should go the way of vinyl, and interested people should bring it back for a healthier news diet.

Miscellaneous:
  • One thing Hayes mentioned that wasn’t mentioned by Haidt (as far as I can remember) is the infinite scroll, which replaced the forcing function of having to decide to continue on to the next web page with a smooth “feed” of content.

Saturday, December 20, 2025

The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness by Jonathan Haidt

    This is just the latest of many books that I have read after already having formed an positive opinion about the contents, and then had that opinion confirmed. It makes it hard to evaluate a book when I know it is just telling me what I want to hear. So, I think this book is great! But maybe I wouldn't think it was as great if I didn't go in already agreeing. I will say that it's probably a little longer than it needs to be. But still.

    One of the most useful pieces of analysis in the book is about what specific aspects of social media and the internet cause problems for teenagers (although I think it applies to adults as well). He divides the problem in two: overprotection in the real world and underprotection in the virtual world. The "real world" is characterized by four features. First are embodied interactions, meaning communicating with a person in a way that two bodies are together in space and can communicate with body language. Second is that communication is synchronous, and interaction is one-to-one or one-to-several. And finally, communications take place in communities with high bars to entry and exit. As in, when you talk to people in real life, you are usually tied to that person by work, family, or friendship, and what they say is unlikely to make you drop that relationship immediately--or, conversely, if a stranger, then what they say is unlikely to bring them up to friend, family, or coworker level. On the other hand, communication in the virtual world is disembodied, asynchronous, involves tons of one-to-many (not just several) conversations, and conversations take place in communities with low bars to entry and exit. When people talk to strangers or internet acquaintances on the internet, it is easy to get into an internet relationship and easy to drop it.

    Haidt does a good job of showing how the development of different aspects of the internet resulted in a critical mass sometime in the mid-2010s that caused a mental health crisis among teenagers. First, high-speed broadband came about in the mid-2000s. Then, the iPhone arrived in 2007 (although it wasn't until the App Store came out and was popularized in 2008-09 that it had its biggest effects). In 2009, the "like" and "retweet"/"share" buttons came out, which completely changed social media from a way to connect with real-life friends into something that created "virality." Finally, the trend of posting way more images than text skyrocketed when phones added front-facing cameras in 2010 and Facebook acquired Instagram in 2012 (Instagram was already popular but became more popular). Haidt basically leaves it there in terms of the creation of the social media environment that started a mental health crisis for teenagers in the 2010s. I would also say there was something that went on software-wise. I don't know the technical aspects, but I remember a big discussion about "the algorithm" in the early to mid-2010s and how it was creating polarization in American society. With the development of virality, the algorithms tended to show people what they already agreed with, politically. I know that in the late 2010s, there was also a de-emphasis of political content as a reaction to that, and also a "shift to video." Also in the mid-2010s, dating apps became totally normalized, where online dating had been unusual and stigmatized before. Probably the last remaining major shift in social media to present is the arrival of short-form, swipeable video. One shift that happened in the real world that is important in causing more kids to turn to social media was the diminution of social trust in the real world due to a rising awareness of child sex abuse and "stranger danger."

    Haidt's proposals include: no smartphones before high school, no social media before 16, phone-free schools, and far more unsupervised play and childhood independence. In order to increase unsupervised play, Haidt endorses seven solutions: (1) practice letting your kids out of your sight without them having a way to reach you, (2) encourage sleepovers, and don't micromanage them, (3) encourage walking to school in a group, (4) after school is for free play, (5) go camping, (6) find a sleepaway camp with no devices and no safetyism, and (7) form child-friendly neighborhoods and play-borhoods.

    All in all, I think these recommendations and diagnoses are largely applicable to adults as well as children. While children may be in a more obvious path of development, I think adults are developing too. All people are affected by social media, at least in the most basic sense of opportunity cost, and probably more so in true negative effects from online dating and comparison of one's own real life with others' publicized lives on social media. Social media connections are great when they take a relationship or lack thereof and increase the quality of communication. But it is all too common to use social media as a way to decrease communication to a "good enough" level, where a text replaces a call or a call replaces an in-person interaction. While kids and teenagers are especially at risk, all people are less happy when they have less in-person communication with their community.


Miscellaneous:

  • I just thought this was a good description of teenage social media-induced depression: "A girl who feels her value sinking is a girl experiencing rising anxiety. If her sociometer drop is sharp enough, she may become depressed and consider suicide. For depressed or ostracized teens, physical death offers the end of pain, whereas social death is a living hell."

Monday, December 1, 2025

L’étranger de Albert Camus

    L’étranger en un roman a propós d'un homme que assessine autre homme. Cette une livre pettit. J'aimé bien cette livre. Je n'a pas de temps pour écrir une vrai publication de blog en ce moment. Desolé.

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Resistance and Death in the Czenstochower Ghetto (Częstochowa, Poland), edited by Liber Brener, translated by Gloria Berkenstat Freund

    Resistance and Death is the first yizkor book I've read, yizkor being Hebrew for "remember." Yizkor books are books written by Jews in memory of the communities destroyed in the Holocaust, and this one was interesting to me because my grandfather spent four years in Czestochowa, Poland, during the Holocaust, working at the HASAG ammunition factory in the city. The book is really interesting as a yizkor book, since it is not academic, and it is written by someone who actually lived the experience, and is primarily concerned with documenting what they saw as a witness, and the names of people murdered. It has drawbacks because of that, but it makes it a really good primary source for the Holocaust. One difficulty with the translation from Yiddish, however, is that a lot of footnotes were missing. I'm not sure what happened there. The book has a sort of amateur, volunteer feel to its writing and translation that makes it a little difficult to follow at times, but it should be judged more as a primary source.
    Throughout the German occupation, there were a huge number of Jewish and non-Jewish collaborators. In Czestochowa, it seemed like fascist Ukrainians were a big force in the city. But Jewish collaborators were far more numerous, since the Germans made the Jews run the ghettos, at least in the early part of the occupation. The Jewish collaboration was highly variable though, and doesn't ever involve anyone ideologically in line with the Nazis. Rather, Jewish collaborators were usually prior community leaders or educated Jews who thought that collaboration was the best way for the Jewish community to survive, and didn't anticipate that they would be exterminated. Then, when extermination began, the Jewish collaborators either stopped collaborating (and were often murdered), or continued to collaborate to attempt to appease the Germans (and were still murdered). So it's really interesting to see that throughout 1940-42, Jewish policemen were an oppressive force in the ghetto who were given favorable treatment by the Nazis. The governing organization of each ghetto was known as a Judenrat, which I think translates to Jewish council.
    An early method of control during the German occupation was registering the Jews in the ghetto. The Nazis could require people to register by force, and then later used that registration as a checklist for extermination. Czetochowa's population of Jews grew in the early years of the war, since Jews were concentrated there from smaller shtetelech. In August of 1941, there were 164,567 people living in Czestochowa, and 37,667 of them were Jews. By 16 January 1942, there were 40,009 Jews in Czestochowa, but that was somewhere near the peak before extermination, mainly in Treblinka. A small number of these Jews were artisans, like my grandpa's family. Of all the Jews, in May 1942, just 1,676 were artisans, and of those, 190 were in construction with 101 in wood. The main business of Czestochowa for the Germans was the munitions factory where, as of August 1941, 1,400 men were confined in horrible conditions, forced to lie on the floor of the factory to sleep.
    Many massacres were carried out in Czestochowa, but the largest was the large liquidation that began on 22 September 1942. The active extermination of the Jews had begun at the start of 1941, and by this time, the German advance was stalled in Russia. Jewish policemen brought the news in the morning that the ghetto had been surrounded by Ukrainian Hilspolizei (auxiliary police) in the night, and that there would be a selection. It was the classic situation of dividing people left and right, with one side going to work, and the other side, the "mouths to feed," going to the gas chamber at Treblinka. The initial selection was followed by days of hunting down the Jews that didn't show up, and the Nazis took random potshots at people in windows and on balconies. The deportations following that selection continued for five weeks, until the end of October. About 41,000 Jews were sent to Treblinka or killed on the spot, and those that legally remained were those staying at their workplaces, mostly HASAG. At HASAG, 856 men and 73 women were driven into one factory room where they were guarded by armed security, with machine guns pointed into the room from the opposite factory building. They slept on the bare factory floor and had to "carry out their natural function" while still lying down, and only with permission from security. With the ghetto liquidation complete on November 1st, the remaining Jews were herded into accommodations in the poorest, smallest portion of the former ghetto on December 23rd. They received numbers, from 1 to 5185. 35 were children of policemen and doctors, still allowed to live.
    By June of 1943, it was time to purge even the small ghetto. Jews resisted from bunkers, but the Nazis killed them with grenades. It was an opportunity for the Nazis to crush the Jewish fighting organizations, and an opportunity to loot more valuables that were still hidden in the ghetto. There is a moment here where Brener writes:

The aktsia against the men ended. The lives of a group of young boys aged 12-15 whom Degenhardt wanted to send to their deaths still [hung in the balance]. Liht, the director of the ammunition factory, at the application of Bernard Kurland, declared that such young boys could be of use to him. Degenhardt filled Liht's request and gave the young boys into his jurisdiction.

I thought that was very interesting because it directly corresponds to my grandfather's experience, when he and his two brothers were rescued from execution by Director Liht. The ages would be off though- my grandpa, Richik, and Harry would have been about 14, 20, and 27 I think, but not sure.

    One of the most important aspects of the book is that Brener belonged to resistance organizations in Czestochowa, and details a lot of their efforts, and the names of those killed resisting the Nazis by sabotage and small acts of violence. The biggest obstacle was getting weapons. Dealers of weapons were untrustworthy and could charge exorbitant prices for old hunting rifles that might not even work. And worse, there were many who were just German-placed informants. The Jews of the ghetto manufactured their own grenades, what we would call IEDs today, by February of 1943. I get the idea that the Communists were the biggest resistors, as they were the only ones with the ideological commitment to driving the Germans off. The Zionists wanted to leave Europe, and there was really no other game in town ideologically. But Jews with and without ideology resisted, and sabotage was constant against the Nazis. But in June of 1943, when the small ghetto was liquidated, the Germans surrounded the headquarters of the resistance organization and showered them in bullets, throwing grenades into the tunnels. In July, most of the rest of the resistance decided to leave the city and join partisans in the forests. Work continued in the city until 15 or so January, when the workers started to get evacuated to Ravensbruck and Buchenwald, shortly before 17 January, when the Soviets took the city. 11,000 Jews were in Czestochowa in those last days, and after the evacuations, 5,200 remained for the Soviets to liberate. 1,518 were residents of the city from before the war. They would be, generally, the only ones who stayed. But even most of them would leave after the Kielce pogrom.

Miscellaneous:
  • Czestochowa (spelled many different ways) was the name of the city, and Czestochowianka was a name for the textile factory that was converted into an ammunition factory- this is of interest since my grandpa would use both terms. I thought they were interchangeable, but now I know they're not.