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The Stars in Our Pockets: Getting Lost and Sometimes Found in the Digital Age

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Stars in Our Pockets: Getting Lost and Sometimes Found in the Digital Age

Contributors:

By (Author) Howard Axelrod

ISBN:

9780807036754

Publisher:

Beacon Press

Imprint:

Beacon Press

Publication Date:

14th January 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

303.4833

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

200

Dimensions:

Width 140mm, Height 216mm

Description

Human innovation in tech is changing the world around us in ways we often fail to perceive. But what of the changes that are happening inside of us Howard Axelrod spent two years living in solitude after a basketball accident left him blinded in one eye. In his memoir, The Point of Vanishing, he recounts his search for a means of orienting himself in the world. Now, Axelrod spins his personal philosophy out into the wider world, where technology is changing the nature of human consciousness faster than we can see it happening. He draws a parallel between the environmental crisis and a lesser-known, but equally pressing issue- as we lose the world around us, he argues, we are losing our interior worlds, too. We can't navigate without a GPS, we can't pay attention unless our attention is DEMANDED in all caps and moving pictures. We tap our phones 2,617 times a day, inadvertently deciding to rely on these devices instead of our minds to provide our lives with content and meaning. In the tradition of Leslie Jamison's Empathy Exams, Axelrod marshals cultural and theoretical ideologies to ask questions both personal and universal.

Reviews

The Stars in Our Pockets isnt really a memoir or a polemic but a sequence of meditations on what we risk losing as we offer phones ever more control over our livesbeautiful, elegantly expressed, Axelrod manag[es] to communicate both the strength of his conviction and the difficulty of persuading others to share it.
The New York Review of Books

Axelrod makes a compelling argument for drawing a new kind of map, one that helps us as we search and stumble between the borderlines of our digital and physical worlds . . . he meditates on the ways our screens are changing our relationship to time, space, and each other, while dipping into philosophy, astronomy, neuroscience, and poetry. Like his memoir, its an intimate book; he discusses big themes, big ideas, but the feel is as though you are leaning in close across a table in a dimly lit space.
The Boston Globe

If we imagine, with wild configuration, Thoreau as one parenthesis, Axelrod could be the other, the two holding decades of social evolution between them. Thoreau appeared when America was still young, a seer who could caution how the newly invented telegraph could alter our natural sense of time and space; Axelrod shows us what that alteration now looks like. He makes clear what our new condition portends, and also makes clear, by his own example, that those former ways fronting the world are not yet completely lost. These are the stars in our pockets, the constellations that have guided our navigation for so long.
Sven Birkerts, AGNI Magazine

Poetic, ruminative, and never preachy, this book is a game changer for readers who yearn to see beyond 240 characters.
Booklist, Starred Review

A provocative inquiry . . . Refreshingly, Axelrod doesnt deliver a screed against cybertechnology but rather a series of philosophical meditations on the consequences of connecting ourselves digitally to the point where the realm of the screen is a world unto itself.
Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review

Axelrod provides powerful arguments against todays all-encompassing digital world in this concise and insightful meditation.
Publishers Weekly

Timely, essential, generous...Put down your phone and read this book. Maybe even get your friends to read it, too, and then have the kinds of conversations about it that cant be had on social media.
Chicago Tribune

Praise for The Point of Vanishing
What makes his book completely mesmerizingbesides his lovely prose, that isis how exquisitely it balances between the poles of revelation and disintegration. At times, in the depths of winter, when Axelrod becomes preoccupied with observing the changing color of shadows on the snow, he seems on the verge of a transcendent understanding of how to exist entirely in the present.
Slate Book Review


Mr. Axelrod is clearly a gifted writer . . . The best thing about Mr. Axelrods frequently absorbing book is how idiosyncratic it feels; he is a unique presence on the page.
New York Times Daily Review

Author Bio

Howard Axelrod's essays have appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Salon, Virginia Quarterly Review, and the Boston Globe, among other publications. He has taught at Harvard, the University of Arizona, and currently teaches writing at Loyola University in Chicago. His first book, The Point of Vanishing- A Memoir of Two Years in Solitude, was named one of the best books of 2015 by Slate, the Chicago Tribune, and Entropy Magazine, and one of the best memoirs of 2015 by Library Journal. This is his second book.

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