Human Fracking: The $17 Trillion War for Your Attention
Pay attention to this interview. Because, you see, attention is seriously expensive — the Silicon Valley industry being worth $17 trillion, at least according to the Princeton historian D. Graham Burnett, co-editor of a new manifesto entitled Attensity. For Burnett and his friends in the Attention Liberation Movement, the attention industry is "fracking" the human out of us. Liberating ourselves from its exploitative grasp, then, is an existential challenge. "If we take our attention away," he warns, "it collapses into sand." And so will we. So paying attention involves more than simply putting down our phones. It means joining the Attensity movement and challenging the central attention economy principles of 21st century capitalism.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
How to Tell the American Story
Phew! When AI ate the internet
A Chilling Plot to Grab the World's Food and Water Resources
How to Get Beyond the Shame of Sexual Violence
America's First Great Naturalist
The Uncomfortable Truths Our Dogs Would Tell Us If They Could Talk
Why Novels Must Be More Believable than Non-Fiction Books
Remembering Judy Garland, Michael Jackson, the Spice Girls and Stevie Wonder
From Pizza and Meze to Ramen and Borscht: Unscrambling the Politics of National Dishes
Is most of rural America really plotting to destroy democracy?
On the Importance of Being Batshit Crazy
American Whitelash: Wesley Lowery on the cost of progress in an increasingly multiracial America
The American Dream of a "Tossed Salad": Luma Mufleh on reconciling her identity as a gay Muslim woman with an Arab-turned-American refugee