what do we gain from
THE CEASELESS PROFUSION OF DATA
by
LAWRENCE WESCHLER
______________________________________
Lawrence
Weschler
is the author of many books including Uncanny
Valley: Adventures in the Narrative. His
essay, "And Yet . . . And Yet" first appeared in Popular
Science.
I should
perhaps begin by saying that I am as big a fan of the Net and
the Web and the whole expanding ‘information universe’
as anyone you are likely to meet. I find myself online all the
time, mining for data, merrily skipping from one site to the
next, passing the time of day after day (and night after night)
in scattershot dalliances (sampling this and sampling that in
a virtual delirium of free association), deploying my trove
of finds in ever more elaborate collages of discovery (or is
it recovery?) of my own. And yet . . . and yet . . .
As
a professional storyteller, I suffer the occasional compunction,
a tug of misgiving about the whole existence of that vast cloud
of data, as we’ve all now taken to calling I -- its character,
its purpose, its implications. For starters, that very word.
Should such an exponentially compounding explosion of data even
be likened to anything so comforting as a fluffy lamb-white
cloud? Isn’t it more like a churning volcanic eruption,
a great seething spewing-forth of material -- an upwelling vision
so mesmerizingly beautiful in itself, granted, that we can hardly
take our eyes off it (that is, perhaps, till the heat blast
comes and sweeps us away)?
My
misgivings, though, are more than merely linguistic. There is
as well, for example, the problem of the insubstantiality of
that entire digital spew, its sheer desperate impermanence.
Nothing in this world, of course, has ever been completely permanent;
still, it seems that across the centuries the means by which
we preserve our data have been becoming less and less so with
each passing iteration. (“When it comes to permanence,”
as my friend Blaise Aguera y Arcas, the founding force behind
the photo-stitching application Photosynth, is fond of saying,
“the Rosetta Stone is the Rosetta Stone -- and it’s
been all downhill since then.”).
It’s
not just that hardware keeps getting replaced, such that yesterday’s
delivery devices are superannuated to the point where one no
longer has equipment capable of decoding old cassettes, floppy
discs, zip drives, or even those lovely vinyl records uselessly
arrayed in the cupboard below your CD player (assuming, that
is, that you still have a CD player). There’s also the
relentless progress of software. When the Y2K crisis was pending,
there was barely anyone left who sufficiently understood how
to program COBOL -- old geezers had to be pulled from retirement
to worry out code deposited just a few decades earlier. And
don’t even get me started about my WordPerfect files from
less than 10 years ago.
Which,
of course, is where the cloud comes in, or so its proponents
assure us. No need to worry anymore about the grossly material
question of equipment. The information will live on in multiple,
continually upgraded domains. And the software? Why, that too
will be continually upgraded. Only the data will remain consistent,
an eternal form maintained within the roiling cloud.
And
yet . . .Why should the cloud behave any differently than every
other conceptual/technical breakthrough has so far? Consider,
for example, the case of my friend Erin Hogan, who some years
ago posted a marvelous piece about the paintings of Barnett
Newman on a website called Artkrush. The other day, she wanted
to refer back to the piece, so she went to the Artkrush site,
but it had ceased to be. The original draft of her essay is
on a hard drive from three computers back. The piece had migrated
to a cloud of an altogether different order, and it lives (if
at all) with the Choir Eternal. Can anyone doubt that similar
sorts of problems will afflict anyone wanting to go back and
review a favourite Kindle title five years from now? Who knows
how long Amazon itself will continue to exist before it gets
superseded by the next great killer-app store? Netscape, anyone?
But
it's not just that -- the transience, the temporal insubstantiality
of it all. There’s another kind of digital insubstantiality,
an essential ghostliness to the digital data cloud, that nags
at me as well.
Back
when I was in college, in the early 1970s, I confronted an earlier
version of this misgiving: the fallacy of the slide carousel.
Our art history course had arrived at Mark Rothko, and as our
professor rifled through a carousel of slides tracing the arc
of the great Abstract Expressionist’s entire trajectory,
one could indeed see the colors in those paintings slowly congealing
across the first half of Rothko’s career into that signature
vertical pile of four and three and then just two colour-saturated
diaphanous cloud-forms, hovering one atop the other, and how
the colours continued transmuting over the decades, how they
gradually grew darker and darker, starker and starker, finally
arriving by the very end at that brooding black over a knife-edge
white horizon: suicide. There, that was Rothko. Which was fine
as far as it went, except that I couldn’t help but think
how if one had instead been confronted with the canvases themselves,
one would have been forced to tend to them one at a time, and
presently to one uniquely (there are days, on my museum walks,
when I can hardly endure more than one, such is their commanding
power). The canvases, as material objects, would have objected
to such cavalier rifling.
(Some
years later, I had occasion to meet another artist, Robert Irwin,
who for the first several decades of his career forbade any
photo documentation of his work at all, on the grounds that
a photograph could capture everything the work was not about
and nothing that it was -- which is to say, it could approximate
the image but never convey its presence).
And
this is a problem, a species of category confusion, that is
exponentially aggravated on the Web. At least before each new
lecture, someone had to hold the slides in his hands, awkwardly,
momentarily fumblingly, so as to be able to reorder them into
the carousel. Yet even that minimal trace of persistent objecthood
is obviated on Google Images (notwithstanding all that service’s
other charms and conveniences).
In
a similar vein, Adam Thompson, a digital designer, once commented
on the way that “people who would never dream of shoplifting
a CD from a music store give no thought to downloading entire
albums” off the Web. Bracketing for a moment the question
of the morality or lack thereof of such behaviour (culture wants
to be free, etc.), the thing I want to focus on here is that
throwaway phrase “give no thought.” Because it seems
to me exactly right. The behaviour is literally not worth a
thought (data always tending toward the condition of weightlessness).
The
opposite of such a posture toward the world would be one in
which things mattered. As in: “What’s the matter?”
“Why does it matter?” “This stuff really matters
to me.” Matter as in mater (mother, the root as well of
the word ‘material,’ and hence back to substantial,
the opposite of insubstantial).
Another
way of trying to get at what sometimes troubles me about this
endlessly proliferating profusion of discrete bits of data is
to compare the experience of encountering information, say,
on the Web (still the most common and efficient portal into
the cloud) with that of encountering it in books. For they provide
two fundamentally different sorts of experiences. Books are
centripetal, whereas the Web is centrifugal. Books draw you
in, whereas Web pages hurl you forth and out (by way of all
those irresistible links).
The
Web, as we have seen, is immaterial (opening, as it now does,
into a cloud). Books, in contrast, are not just substantial
they are substantial in a particular way: They have a spine,
which in turn implies a pair of outstretched arms and an enfolding
embrace, or at the very least a dance.
Books force you to enter into a kind of I-Thou relationship
-- approaching, as the poet Rilke once parsed matters, the “more
human love” that “consists in the mutual guarding,
bordering and saluting of two solitudes.” The Web occasions
a sort of frenzy of rebound, a swirling frottage with the many
(albeit one that is almost solipsistically onanistic).
As
a writer of articles and books, I go to great pains to pace
my argument, choosing my words exactly and layering the progression
of my argument, feathering in subtle rhymes and the like. And
I don’t appreciate it when somebody comes divebombing
in from out of the cloud for a few choice phrases and, whiz-bang,
is already gone. And nor should you, as a reader of articles
and books, imagine that you are engaging anywhere near the full
force of my or anyone else’s argument when you come careering
in and out like that.
And
yet . . .and yet . . . Has there ever been a greater boon to
a lover of books (and often the long out-of-print titles that
are the very nectar of the passion) than the Web -- AbeBooks
and all the other used-bookstore cooperatives? As I say, when
it comes to the utopian claims of digital data, I remain stoutly,
adamantly of two minds.
Two
minds whipped and countersawed by the increasingly frenzied
passage of time. When I contemplate the great churning cloud,
I’m reminded of a passage in Walter Benjamin’s Illuminations,
in which the sublime Weimar-era elegist takes to anatomizing
a delicate drawing by his friend the artist Paul Klee of what
he infers to be the Angel of History. “His face is turned
towards the past,” Benjamin surmises. “Where we
see the appearance of a chain of events, he sees one single
catastrophe, which unceasingly piles rubble on top of rubble
and hurls it before his feet . . . He would like to pause for
a moment . . . to awaken the dead and to piece together what
has been smashed. But a storm is blowing from Paradise, it has
caught itself up in his wings and is so strong that the Angel
can no longer close them. The storm drives him irresistibly
into the future, to which his back is turned, while the rubble-heap
before him grows sky-high. That which we call progress, is this
storm.”
That
passage, in turn, has always reminded me of a story Hermine
Wittgenstein tells in her memoir about a time when her brother,
the great philosopher Ludwig, was preparing to give it all up
to go teach elementary school in some backwater of the Austro-Hungarian
empire. Couldn’t he see, she demanded, what a waste such
a bizarre resolve entailed? To which he shot back, “And
you remind me of someone looking through a closed window unable
to explain the strange movements of a passerby; unaware that
a storm is raging outside and that the person is only with great
effort keeping himself on his feet.”
And
you, fond reader, Thou to my I, how are you experiencing the
traction nowadays? What, if any, purchase do you still have
on solid ground?