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Latest column, where I discuss the "diversity" issue I raised here last week, and I add a new twist.

The Rules Of The Game #27: Is Diversity Diverse?

The new twist is this question: Doesn't cultural diversity, like biodiversity, depend on a certain amount of isolation, so that dominant modes of thought don't come in and wipe out everything else?

Oh, and I quote you all (or some of you, anyway).

EDIT: Here are links to all but three of my other Rules Of The Game columns (LVW's search results for "Rules of the Game"). Links for the other three (which for some reason didn't get "Rules Of The Game" in their titles), are here: #4, #5, and #8.

UPDATE: I've got all the links here now:

http://koganbot.livejournal.com/179531.html

Date: 2008-01-17 06:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] freakytigger.livejournal.com
"Nothing is under the radar" is a very big claim! Whose radar? Don't things just stay "under the radar" for a shorter time? What made bits of internet culture (like 'blogs') really thrilling to me when I joined in was the sense that this was a potentially huge thing not really being considered as a 'culture' exactly - though of course it quickly became so.

And the potency question is a very big question of course - where does the loss of potency come from, though? Does the fandom lessen in potency when more people know about a thing, or does the activity lessen in potency because people introduce "school" ideas to it?

As a marketer and as a critic I'm interested in when self-consciousness emerges in a group or cultural activity ("marketing" just being a businesslike name for "self-consciousness") - when something cultural starts worrying about its external context, how 'the world' perceives it: cultural puberty, if you like. Wolfeian criticism - and most kinds of criticism - accelerates that process. Internet visibility accelerates that process - maybe even foreshortens it to the point that self-consciousness is immediate. Also, maybe the lack of self-consciousness is an illusion produced by hindsight, observers mixing up self-consciousness with their own consciousness of a thing.

Re: My response to Richard

Date: 2008-01-18 07:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] edgeofwhatever.livejournal.com
Not sure I get this distinction. Seems to me the different perspective comes from different knowledge. Where else would it come from?

From what you do with the knowledge. The thing about groupthink is, nobody asks questions, nobody considers things from another angle. Think about all the people who know what you know about Autobiography and still trash it -- it's not that you have some special secret knowledge about it, it's that you've looked at it in a different way.

Anyway, if I remember the groupthink / Bay of Pigs study correctly, it wasn't so much that every person in the group had the same perspective -- more like they weren't willing to offer different ones. It was more like "groupact."

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Frank Kogan

July 2025

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