The title demonstrates a false dichotomy, one right up there with books vs. e-text and dozens of others in this stage of the information age. One can fall off an elephant on both sides, after all.
The specific inspiration for the title comes from a Chronicle Wired Campus blog entry linking to an essay by Robert Johnson, CIO of Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee. Johnson makes a good case that removing books from a library in favor of e-texts and social spaces is a shortsighted strategy. But then he falls off the elephant on the other side by insisting that the screen experience cannot in any way rival the print experience, which is one of great involvement, physical comfort, life-changing depth, and so forth. After awhile, I feel as if I’m watching a Maxwell House commercial, and anyone who knows me knows that I too love books with a mighty love.
But of course I love computers too. Funny how that works. Here I am writing and reading online. Not too long ago I was gently turning the pages of 16th- and 17th-century books in the Duke Humfrey’s Library at Oxford’s Bodleian library. I find both experiences compelling and valuable. I bet I’m not alone. Perhaps this is the issue, or the divide: there are those who have found compelling textual experiences online, and those who have not. My hunch is that Johnson is looking at online reading/writing through the wrong generic lens. It’s the difference between curling up with a novel and reading a blog. Both use writing, and both can be extraordinary, even transformative experiences.
The Chronicle’s blog entry features a long comment from Dartmouth’s Malcolm Brown that offers a very reasonable middle ground. Well worth reading, especially if one wants to stay on the elephant.