文本注意:延迟与“ADD一代”

S. Senk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

“注意力缺陷障碍(ADD, Attention Deficit Disorder)一代”这一说法,已经渗透到大众和学术界对千禧一代如何被过度刺激的新媒体严重削弱的描述中。这些不同说法的统一前提是,今天的大学生已经受到数字媒体的认知影响,他们的阅读习惯已经从根本上改变了(Birkerts, Fitzpatrick)。他们自己记住的东西少了,因为他们对外化记忆库的信任削弱了他们保留信息的能力(穆勒)。最重要的是,问题似乎是,当前的学生可以获得的媒体资源过多,却没有提供解释如何处理这些信息的答案。数字阅读的本质,以及其他因素,意味着读者越来越想做手头任务以外的事情,因为点击和滚动的便利性,以及不可避免的弹出式干扰。千禧一代追求的不是前数字时代的“单轨专注”,而是“不停地点击和滚动”(Birkerts, xiv)——这种数字激活的阅读习惯表面上是“碎片化”和“缩小”的注意力持续时间。在大学教了十年英语之后,我发现很难反驳这些说法。近年来,为了应对阅读习惯的变化,我大幅削减了课程教学大纲上的必读内容;我五年前教过的一门课,今天的版本只包含了原来指定阅读材料的一半,但今天的学生仍然更多地抱怨数量。即使是我那些为了乐趣而读书的死硬的英语专业学生,也很难一口气读完一本小说的一章。每当这些学生盯着我办公室书架上的几百本小说,并惊呼有一天他或她希望像我一样拥有“一面墙的书”时,我就会想到,即使是爱书之人似乎也会从被动消费的角度看待阅读;他们设想有一天他们也会“拥有”书,但他们从不谈论阅读它们的体验。虽然大多数关于“注意力缺失症一代”的说法都集中在学生的注意力不集中上,但我发现,通过数字媒体获取和分享信息的速度,使我的学生在阅读练习中一直期待着立竿见影的效果。把他们的数字媒体消费称为“被动”是错误的,因为这意味着一个不专注的消费者会在很长一段时间内吸收整体的一小部分。在我看来,问题不仅在于学生们注意力不集中,还在于他们开始把阅读这样的扩展过程看成是一个终点:找到答案,现在就找到答案。莎拉SENK
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Attention to the Text: Delay and the “ADD Generation”
The phrase, “ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder) generation,” has penetrated both popular and academic accounts of how millennials have been critically debilitated by the availability of hyper stimulating new media. The unifying premise of these varied accounts is that today’s college students have been so cognitively affected by digital media that their reading practices have fundamentally changed (Birkerts, Fitzpatrick). They remember less of their own accord because their capacity to retain information has been weakened by their trust in externalized repositories of memory (Mueller). Above all, the problem seems to be that the surfeit of media available to current students offers no answer key explaining how to process it. The nature of digital reading, among other things, means that readers are increasingly tempted to do anything other than the task at hand by the ease of the click and scroll, and the inescapability of pop-up distractions. In place of the “single track concentration” that characterized the pre-digital era, millennials pursue “the restless, grazing behavior of clicking and scrolling” (Birkerts, xiv)—digitally-activated reading habits that have ostensibly “fragmented” and “shrunk” attention spans. After teaching English at the college level for a decade, I find it hard to dispute these claims. In recent years I’ve responded to changing reading practices by making drastic cuts to the amount of required reading on my course syllabi; today’s version of a course I taught five years ago contains precisely half the original assigned reading, but students today still complain more about the quantity. Even my diehard English majors who read for pleasure struggle to finish a single chapter of a novel in one sitting. Every time that one of those same students stares at the few hundred novels on the shelves in my office and exclaims that one day he or she hopes to have “a wall of books” like mine, I consider how even the bibliophiles seem to think about reading in terms of passive consumption; they envision a time in which they too will “have” books, but they never speak about the experience of reading them. Though most of the accounts of “the ADD generation” focus on students’ inattention, I find that the speed of accessing and sharing information over digital media perpetuates an expectation of immediate results in my students’ reading practices. It’s a mistake to call their consumption of digital media “passive” because that connotes an extended period of time in which an unfocused consumer absorbs bits and pieces of a whole. The problem, as I see it, is not just that students are unfocused, but that they have come to think of extended processes like reading solely in terms of an endpoint: to have the answer, and to have it now. SARAH SENK
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