A Blogger's Life
Andrew Sullivan has a really insightful essay in the latest Atlantic on the challenges and the rewards of blogging. I was especially struck by this passage:
To blog is therefore to let go of your writing in a way, to hold it at arm's length, open it to scrutiny, allow it to float in the ether for a while, and to let others, as Montaigne did, pivot you toward relative truth. A blogger will notice this almost immediately upon starting. Some e-mailers, unsurprisingly, know more about a subject than the blogger does. They will send links, stories, and facts, challenging the blogger's view of the world, sometimes outright refuting it, but more frequently adding context and nuance and complexity to an idea. The role of a blogger is not to defend against this but to embrace it. He is similar in this way to the host of a dinner party. He can provoke discussion or take a position, even passionately, but he also must create an atmosphere in which others want to participate.
And at a time when most people in our business anguish over what has come to be regarded as a zero-sum struggle to the death between print and the web, Sullivan sees the two as strengthening each other, and comes to a conclusion that is positively bracing in its optimism--and idealism:
In fact, for all the intense gloom surrounding the news-paper and magazine business, this is actually a golden era for journalism. The blogosphere has added a whole new idiom to the act of writing and has introduced an entirely new generation to nonfiction. It has enabled writers to write out loud in ways never seen or understood before. And yet it has exposed a hunger and need for traditional writing that, in the age of television's dominance, had seemed on the wane.
Words, of all sorts, have never seemed so now.
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I agree that "traditional" journalism is needed now more than ever. We need accounts that reflect then discipline of objective journalism, even if post-modern times tell us true objectivity is impossible!
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