Janna Novak / 3A / Hendricks
Sunday, August 12, 2018
The age of earthquakes
Janna Novak / 3A / Hendricks
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Owner of a Lonely Heart Klosterman Response Paper
Taylor Swift, according to Klosterman, is not what she seems. She is deeper than people are willing to believe, a fact derived from her fe...
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Upon reading The Age of Earthquakes , I found it difficult to comprehend the full meaning of the book. As I continued to read the novel I...
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Response to Age of Earthquakes Manas Jalihal The Age of Earthquakes , written by Shumon Basar, is a representation of technology as ...

I enjoyed how you exposed the parallel between relationships in both reality and the media. The use of apps in this speak lengths as to how we see others in a relationship, acting more like a "tool in the toolbox". Not anything more or anything less. A phone can act as the individual, while apps can be the apparent "addition" to their life.
ReplyDeleteI too had to read the book multiple times before I was able to understand what the book was attempting to convey. I believe having to read the book a couple times was a purposeful goal by the author. You are able to move through the book as quickly as scrolling through something on the internet, thus the author has created a trap. The authors are attempting to inform about the consuming characteristics of the internet by showing you how easy it is to lose site of what you are doing and the meaning behind it when they are present. Are brains are rewired to be dependent on the internet and even just a book that looks like it can satisfy it. I think in this case awareness is one of the most valuable characteristics the book has provided. Otherwise, as your creative addition suggested, we may slowly delete the people from our online life until they aren't there in our offline life either.
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