Sunday, September 19, 2010

To All Those Who Resist the Feed- M.T.A.

          For my blog post this week, I wanted to talk about M.T. Anderson’s Feed. For those of you who have not had a chance to read the novel, it begins with a group of teens flying to the moon for their Spring Break. The main character, Titus, and his friends belong to a society in which people are connected to the internet through a ‘feed,’ or a chip that is implanted in their brains. While on vacation, Titus and his friends meet Violet, a strange but beautiful girl who has traveled to the moon by herself. Violet decides to join the kids in their plans to go to a night club, where they are attacked by a ‘hacker’ who essentially disrupts their feeds and implants a type of virus to corrupt their connections. As Titus and Violet begin to grow closer, he learns that she is home schooled by a single father and that her father’s income and personal beliefs prevented her from getting her feed installed until she was older. Because the feed was implanted in Violet’s brain so late, she is unable to fully recover from the hacker’s attack and it begins to have a detrimental effect on her body physically, as the technology has become connected to the natural bodily functions of human beings.
            This story basically illustrates all of our current fears of the affects modern technology will have upon our society in the future. The characters chatting through instant messaging instead of speaking out loud. The Earth being essentially destroyed and overpopulated to the point that people have built outward from the surface and fly through the vertical levels of neighborhoods in their ‘upcars,’ which have replaced contemporary automobiles. It is easy for the reader to get caught up in all of the futuristic aspects of this story. I was interested to read in “A Conversation with M.T. Anderson” in the back of the novel that the story was not written with the intention of being solely classified as a ‘futuristic novel.’ Anderson explains,

             “I think of it more as a novel that uses images from an imagined future in an almost allegorical way to discuss things we’re dealing with now.”

             In the interview, Anderson talks specifically about how are society is manipulated by the media and how we have a responsibility to be aware of the complexity of the world we live in and the issues and events occurring every day. He encourages teens to use Violet’s character as an example and to develop a healthy sense of curiosity and individuality. In the novel, Violet comes to the realization that the advertising and media companies controlling the feeds are targeting consumers based on their demographic, which is in turn causing the interests of each group to become more and more similar, and therefore losing their individuality in the process. She makes an attempt to confuse the feed by expressing interest in a long list of random and obscure products, so that the technology will not be able to figure out how to market to her. Anderson encourages his readers to explore themselves and their interests and not be so influenced by trends in the media.

-Katie Durkin

3 comments:

  1. While reading your post the idea of the hacker really interested me. now a days a hacker is simply someone who likes to mess with computers and will maybe create a virus in order to pull a practical joke. However, the hacker in Feed could possibly cause death. This idea brings up a new breed of cyber criminals that could possibly be charged for homicide. However this idea of the feed also brings up the idea of new medical treatments. with the feed (I'm not exactly sure of what the feed is but I'm going off the description in the blog)your body could be monitored every single second, so the moment something went wrong the authorities would immediately be called. This might also mean that yearly physicals become null and void because the person is having a physical every second. I thought the idea of the feed was very interesting because it has so many interesting consequences.

    --Amer

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  2. There's a lot of controversy right now in the technology world about what the internet particularly does to our brains, which further roots Feed into current conversation. The controversy surrounds how the internet is rewiring our brains. On one side, the argument is about how internet increases our ability to do things like multi-task. The other argues internet decreases our creativity. I think M.T. Anderson is more for the latter in a way, but he also scraped by in avoiding the cognitive psychology present that would argue for the former.

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  3. i found it very interesting that the author used the young girl's economic status as her "weakness." is he using this as a symbol of our economy and pointing out how difficult it is to keep up in today's world when money is not at out fingertips to spread for our gain?

    -Lucy

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