Thanks for this Dr. Ward. An absolutely crucial message. Even though it becomes easy for technophiles to ascribe your insistence on a critical perspective to generational differences, we need to do real work on deprogramming the constant focus on consumption that marks this cultural moment. This need really is what John Oliver Killens talked about a generation ago, right–the crucial need for cultural programming to counter what we're bombarded with every day. We're constantly told that we should consume everything, and we confuse technology use and consumption with participation or engagement.
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Project HBW Blog
On Digital Scholarship…Blogging and other Technologies
Citation
"On Digital Scholarship…Blogging and other Technologies," History of Black Writing (blog),
, https://hbw.ku.edu/blog/digital-scholarshipblogging-and-other-technologies

Some of us who have not been figuratively in “arranged marriages since birth” with emerging technologies are more willing than our younger colleagues to question just how progressive are swift changes in our disciplines and in the purposes of education. We want to know how the romance with digital technology is related to globalization. We want to know how the “love affair” with technology and everything digital is increasing or diminishing thoughtful, historical reflection on the formal (structural) and cultural (discursive) changes. One colleague has warned me that expressing concern about history is a mark of my own antiquity. So be it. Occasionally, there may be real virtue to be found in being antiquated and moral in nascent, amoral environments.

Change is inevitable. Nevertheless, passive acceptance should be balanced with active resistance. Scholars in all disciplines, especially those in the human sciences, ought to think deeply about a central question that can be articulated in disturbingly plain language: is the ultimate outcome of digital scholarship the liberation or the enslavement of the human mind?
Jerry W. Ward, Jr.
Professor of English, Dillard University
2 thoughts on “On Digital Scholarship…Blogging and other Technologies”
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Thanks, Mr. Banks for drawing attention to the matter of consumption.
Sincerely,
J. W. Ward, Jr.
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