Virtual Reality Versus the Book, by Elizabeth Kay
It’s been
bothering me for some time, this move to an alternative world. We get our
natural history in exotic locations via a screen, edited and selected with its
stunning visuals and recorded birdsong and absence of mosquito bites and tummy
bugs. There’s nothing to discover – it’s all been done for you, and the sensory
experience narrowed to sight and sound alone. A walk in the countryside is so different:
binoculars round your neck, the chattering of a squirrel, the smell of grass or
cow dung or honeysuckle, the taste of that blackberry you just snaffled, the
wind in your face. You don’t know what you’re going to encounter, from an adder
basking in the sun to a brightly-coloured toadstool. That insect you saw – what
on earth was it? And the smaller the focus of your attention, the more chance
you have of discovering something entirely new. There is no substitute for
reality, although we’re trying very hard to do it and making a lot of money out
of it in the process.
The thing about virtual reality is that it doesn’t really engage the mind, just the adrenaline, and that makes us think the experience is genuine. It isn’t. It’s fake. It’s something dreamed up inside the heads of a team of people – cleaned-up, the boring bits surgically removed, the exciting bits enhanced. The end result is that we don’t care about the world around us any more because it doesn’t match up to the scenarios invented for us in software houses. Kids in the developed world are starting to prefer to sit in their rooms, playing games on their consoles where danger is fabricated for them. Even in China, I saw a group of Tibetan
If I could, I’d make every child
do a bit of beach-combing. Shells are amazing, they’re all different, and you
never know what else might wash up, from a bright red jellyfish to a piece of
coral or even a fossil. Closer to home, a trip to the common with a bug box and
a hand lens can be a real adventure, with spiders using all sorts of weird strategies
to catch their prey and spiderlings hatching in great clusters and heading off
into the unknown on a thread of silk. And just like arachnids, we too still have
the urge to hunt – as well as the gathering instinct. If you’ve ever collected
blackberries or cobnuts you’ll know how surprisingly satisfying it can be.
These days, we find ways to channel those instincts elsewhere. The poem below
was first published in Manifold Magazine which, sadly, is no longer running due
to the death of its extraordinary creator, Vera Rich. For those who are
interested, the form is a Russian one and the recipe for writing one can be found here:
Hunting
Hunting is something we do, it is hard-wired -
Shopping’s replaced all that cut-and-thrust goo;
Bargains, not mammoths, are what get our hearts fired -
Autumn’s the season to try to recapture
Ancestral legacies - I’ll clarify -
Edible toadstools our quarry - what rapture -
Autumn’s the season to try.
Don’t need a spear or a bow and an arrow,
Just have to focus your eyes on below;
Chanterelles, parasols, there by the barrow
Don’t need a spear or a bow.
Funny how quickly you learn all their humours,
Woods they prefer, and the places they spurn;
Some grow alone, some invade trees like tumours -
Funny how quickly you learn.
Hunting is something we do, it is hard-wired.
Next time you’re searching those shelves for a coup,
Remember the instinct that first got our hearts fired;
Hunting is something we do.
So why are books different from virtual reality? I think it’s
because you have to work at it, you have to create the pictures yourself, from
the clues given to you by the author – and every Mr Darcy is slightly
different. Unless you’ve seen the film, of course, when he’s fixed forever as
Colin Firth emerging from a lake.
Three
cheers for the book, whether in print or on your E-reader, because it’s through
the effort of visualising what an author has written down that it becomes memorable.
Recalling a tv programme is something you tend to do visually, but in a book
it’s the words themselves that linger in the mind, and may make you think in a
new way about something many years later. Although you can pause tv these days
we don’t tend to do it to stop and think about what we’ve just seen, we do it
because we haven’t seen or heard something clearly enough. With a book, you
pause because you want to think about what you’ve just read and consider its
relevance in your own life.
Comments
Only a pedant like me would point out that the verse form is not Russian, but Belarusian. (But then, it's a page of my website that Liz is linking to!)