Withdrawing Attention is Civil Disobediance

Civil disobedience in the attention economy means withdrawing attention. But doing that by loudly quitting Facebook and then tweeting about it is the same mistake as thinking that the imaginary Pera is a real island that we can reach by boat. A real withdrawal of attention happens first and foremost in the mind. What is needed, then, is not a “once-and-for-all” type of quitting but ongoing training: the ability not just to withdraw attention, but to invest it somewhere else, to enlarge and proliferate it, to improve its acuity. We need to be able to think across different time scales when the mediascape would have us think in twenty-four-hour (or shorter) cycles, to pause for consideration when clickbait would have us click, to risk unpopularity by searching for context when our Facebook feed is an outpouring of unchecked outrage and scapegoating, to closely study the ways that media and advertising play upon our emotions, to understand the algorithmic versions of ourselves that such forces have learned to manipulate, and to know when we are being guilted, threatened, and gaslighted into reactions that come not from will and reflection but from fear and anxiety. I am less interested in a mass exodus from Facebook and Twitter than I am in a mass movement of attention: what happens when people regain control over their attention and begin to direct it again, together.

Notes:

Folksonomies: cyberpunk protest attention economy civil disobedience

Taxonomies:
/technology and computing/internet technology/social network (0.971196)
/health and fitness/disorders/mental disorder/panic and anxiety (0.859758)
/technology and computing/internet technology/web search/people search (0.819332)

Concepts:
Twitter (0.988569): dbpedia_resource
Attention economy (0.950956): dbpedia_resource
Facebook (0.948298): dbpedia_resource
Civil disobedience (0.925448): dbpedia_resource
Mind (0.897691): dbpedia_resource
Fear (0.806432): dbpedia_resource
Learning (0.761176): dbpedia_resource
Present (0.683780): dbpedia_resource

 How to Do Nothing
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Odell, Jenny (2019-05-07), How to Do Nothing, Retrieved on 2023-09-23
Folksonomies: new media cyberpunk