From Amazon
Standing athwart post-history yelling "Stop," psychologist Richard DeGrandpre looks askance at the cultural impact of our technology in
Digitopia: The Look of the New Digital You. Embracing McLuhan's analysis of media's transforming influence on our lives, he is suspicious of, if not exactly hostile towards, digital culture. It's a fairly conservative message coming from a lefty, but many of his arguments will hit home with all but the most libertarian reader. DeGrandpre's 25 essays are clever, well-informed, and concise, though he's generally more concerned with scoring rhetorical points than illuminating his topics more broadly.
Still, it's important to hear all sides of any argument, even arguments that, like this one, are largely waged implicitly. The pro-tech case is simply the status quo, making collections like Digitopia vital for readers who prefer conscious and thoughtful analysis to careless acceptance. The broad scope DeGrandpre brings is refreshing--including information about teenage girls' body image, pre-literate cultures, and the developing world's health care puts his rhetoric in context and may help convince a few readers that some effects of technology ought to be curbed before post-history leads to post-humanity. --Rob Lightner
From Publishers Weekly
The advertising suggests that laptops and cell phones will give their users unadulterated freedom by letting them conduct business and trade stocks while sunning on the beach. But the ability to work or shop from home (or, even more insidiously, on vacation) means we are never free from the pressure to earn or spend money, observes DeGrandpre (Ritalin Nation). In this energetic book, he warns that new technologies will enslave rather than free us, and that the experience of being constantly "jacked in" keeps us dangerously alienated from the "here and now" and the mundane but often necessary experiences of everyday social interaction. Yet DeGrandpre does not indict laptops and DVDs per se; his target is what he calls the "digital ethos" our cultural consensus that faster is always better. For the many whose bodies and minds adapt all too easily to the rapid-fire changes in technological efficiency, he observes, there is a growing digital dependency. In effect, we become addicted to being hyperstimulated and constantly entertained. DeGrandpre's analysis of the generation gap between "wired" children and their "analog" parents is perhaps the most illuminating part of the book. At the same time, he cautions against the complacent fantasy that everyone else is a techno-slave while the reader is somehow free. While some of DeGrandpre's observations will be familiar to anyone who's ever sat on a crowded commuter train, last Christmas's lackluster techno-gadgets sales suggest that this book will find a sympathetic audience, though perhaps one more interested in the print edition than the electronic version.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.