Blackspot

Melt Your Kindle

The Kindle is not a book and three arguments why this matters.

The trouble with abstract thought is that the concepts we play with in our minds often become preferred to the real upon which these concepts were originally based. As soon as we draw a picture, or take a photograph, of a bird we often no longer care whether the bird continues to exist. The picture is, in our visual society, superior to the chirping bird. This trait of our world-view leads to a despairing and paradoxical situation where our cultural storehouse of symbols, imagery, art and concepts increases in direct proportion to the death of our planet, living beings, other world views, beautiful landscapes, etc. It is for this reason that we should reject the Kindle and hope for its failure: the Kindle ultimately tends toward making books superfluous and replacing them with the mere appearance of books. The Kindle is not a book. It is instead a machine mimicking the external traits of a book while destroying the essence of the book: the trace of the author, the community of readers and the call to deep, meditative reflection.

There are many different levels on which to attack the Kindle. One tactic, which is always bound to failure, is to say that the Kindle is not good enough. This argument generally accepts the premise of the Kindle but argues that for whatever technical reason, the Kindle is a bad product. This is the worst kind of argument to make because it clears the way for Kindle to go through several new iterations, each step taking it closer to "technical perfection" and making these arguments absurd. Instead, we must reject the Kindle even if it manages to overcome all the technical objections to its use.

Instead, I propose three arguments that try to strike the essence of the Kindle. The underlying principle of each position is that the Kindle is not a book, that it is instead a computer that displays text in a (ostensibly) readable manner. It may seem absurd to point this out, but let's define our terms once again: the Kindle is a text-displaying computer that uses electricity; a book is a series of physical pages bound together and covered in permanent ink which requires no energy to display. Now we may proceed to the three arguments against Kindle.

Argument one: The Kindle destroys the trace of the author. After the death of the individual author, books continue to live. They carry the trace of the authors life and thoughts on the page and show this trace through the physical existence of the book. If you hunt for books in bookstores instead of libraries, you may not realize that every age has bound its books differently, used different papers and inks and decorated the page in various ways. The materiality of the book gives us a taste of the author and the time when the book was made. Each book is different and an avid reader can often remember the color of their favorite book or the feel of its pages. The Kindle destroys this because it divorces the text from the book. It displays every book the same. While the text on the screen may changes the physical object in one's hands stays the same. This has some troubling consequences for our relationship to the author's words because what the Kindle really displays is one long book -- simply a long stream of endless, digitized words.

Argument two: the Kindle destroys the community of readers which books engender. The Kindle has been devised by a society that wants to make profit each time a text is read rather than each time a book is purchased. In the old system, once I bought a book I owned it as an object. I could read it as many times as I liked and give it to friends who may give it to their friends. That is the basis behind public libraries, we all share books because we understand that there are more books we'd like to read than we'd ever be able to afford to read. This creates a community of readers who circulate books amongst themselves for the benefit of all. The Kindle is the end of that, no more sharing books, no more public libraries, no more sitting in a bookstore and reading a book without buying it. The Kindle is a prison for words.

Argument three: the Kindle denies the call to deep, meditative reflection. Books have a magic power in that they can draw us into the world of the author and make time pass quickly while we are immersed in the text. The book is the ideal format for presenting complicated, philosophical arguments that require the reader to pause between paragraphs and reflect. The Kindle is the opposite -- it is merely a television for reading text, a computer that will distract us. Furthermore, the adoption of the Kindle will destroy the culture of reading that sets aside sacred places for study: libraries. The Kindle makes these special places unnecessary because it argues that the library will be carried in our pocket. But with the loss of quiet study places for the public will come the loss of the public's capacity for quiet study. This is why some commentators have already reflected that the Kindle is best for trashy novels. But if the Kindle becomes widespread, all we will have is trashy novels.

I present these three arguments in honor of Digital Detox Week. I will post no more blogs this week but instead hope that you have a great seven days offline.

Micah White is a Contributing Editor at Adbusters magazine and an independent activist. He is writing a book on the future of activism. www.micahmwhite.com or micah (at) adbusters.org

88 comments on the article “Melt Your Kindle”

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Anonymous

Books killed the age-old tradition of storytelling where history was passed down by rote memorization. That was when we lost a true art form. Books are prisons for the words that should only be in our hearts. As far as I am concerned the Kindle transfers them from a dusty cell to a white-collar prison.

Anonymous

Books killed the age-old tradition of storytelling where history was passed down by rote memorization. That was when we lost a true art form. Books are prisons for the words that should only be in our hearts. As far as I am concerned the Kindle transfers them from a dusty cell to a white-collar prison.

Anonymous

What happens when we have no more infrastructure. No power, no cell phones, no kindle. We would lose every trace of who we are if we assume, as you do, that all the existing books would disappear.

Anonymous

What happens when we have no more infrastructure. No power, no cell phones, no kindle. We would lose every trace of who we are if we assume, as you do, that all the existing books would disappear.

Anonymous

Although I too mourn the loss of the materiality of books, I do not agree that the sense of an author or of his/her time is lost when a text is transmitted to a digital medium. The taste of the author, as you call it, is kept alive largely through the words that they have written - no matter what the medium. I think, like any technology, there are positive and negative implications to deal with. As someone else commented before me, we shouldn't forget that the "book" itself was also a "new" and very highly feared technology itself during the Renaissance, replacing an oral culture that had existed previously.

Anonymous

Although I too mourn the loss of the materiality of books, I do not agree that the sense of an author or of his/her time is lost when a text is transmitted to a digital medium. The taste of the author, as you call it, is kept alive largely through the words that they have written - no matter what the medium. I think, like any technology, there are positive and negative implications to deal with. As someone else commented before me, we shouldn't forget that the "book" itself was also a "new" and very highly feared technology itself during the Renaissance, replacing an oral culture that had existed previously.

Anonymous

You're latching onto books like a sinking ship. And moreover, you state that kindles are bad because it divorces people from a reality and replaces that reality with an object -- like a photograph en lieu of the object photographed. Likewise, I think you're latching onto the idea of books more than you are the message that books contain, and your doing so to the exact same detrimental effect which you denounce. Kindles are nothing more than a new vector for carrying ideas. As long as those ideas don't change, what difference does it make if it's all delivered on a page or on a screen?

Anonymous

You're latching onto books like a sinking ship. And moreover, you state that kindles are bad because it divorces people from a reality and replaces that reality with an object -- like a photograph en lieu of the object photographed. Likewise, I think you're latching onto the idea of books more than you are the message that books contain, and your doing so to the exact same detrimental effect which you denounce. Kindles are nothing more than a new vector for carrying ideas. As long as those ideas don't change, what difference does it make if it's all delivered on a page or on a screen?

El Ron

To all who discuss the paper cost of actual books: books are probably one of the easiest things to recycle at little to no additional cost of energy or resources. I don't throw a book away when I'm done reading it, I donate it to a library or start the long chain of loaning it to friends. The problem with Kindle, is it eliminates our ability to share the printed word, which has been a long (since the creation of moveable typeface) standing tradition. This is simply another iTunes/iPod conglomerate designed to make us pay for every second of every use of every product we come into contact with.

El Ron

To all who discuss the paper cost of actual books: books are probably one of the easiest things to recycle at little to no additional cost of energy or resources. I don't throw a book away when I'm done reading it, I donate it to a library or start the long chain of loaning it to friends. The problem with Kindle, is it eliminates our ability to share the printed word, which has been a long (since the creation of moveable typeface) standing tradition. This is simply another iTunes/iPod conglomerate designed to make us pay for every second of every use of every product we come into contact with.

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