Culture
Eric Freeman

In their press release, the Nobel Committee says they gave Herta Müller this year’s Prize in Literature for how she, “with the concentration of poetry and the frankness of prose, depicts the landscape of the dispossessed.” I don’t think you can argue that the dispossessed’s landscape should not be depicted. The problem is that the Nobel Committee now only gives the Prize in Literature to people who write about this topic.
Culture
Kevin Hilke
Marshall McLuhan, in his 1964 book Understanding Media, advances the notion that as the globe becomes increasingly interconnected by electronic technology it becomes “no more than a village. Electric speed in bringing all social and political functions together in a sudden implosion has heightened human awareness of responsibility to an intense degree.” The effect of this “implosive factor,” McLuhan maintains, is to alter the position of marginalized subjects, who “can no longer be contained, in the political sense of limited association. They are now involved in our lives, and we in theirs, thanks to the electric media.”