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Talk us into it

Talk us into it Picture

The role of conversation in a changing society and public realm

Conversation has long been the cornerstone of our society. New technologies enable us to speak to people anytime, anywhere. However, there is growing concern – both in the UK and elsewhere - that we are talking less than we used to. This work suggests that this is a misconception and that the issue is actually much more complex.

de Tocqueville, de Schmocqueville - conversation's not declining

Posted by Samuel Jones at 12:12pm on Wednesday, 20th December 2006
Alexis de Tocqueville once wrote of the 'strange unsociability and reserved and taciturn disposition of the English'.  Is this really the case?  There's an article in this week's Economist - subscription only again, I'm afraid - that looks at conversation in history and finishes up with Stephen Miller's claim that conversation is a declining art. 

In Talk Us Into It, we came to the conclusion that it's not.  Conversation as an almost aesthetic pursuit, as in the salons of the 18th Century and Isaiah Berlin's soirees in Georgetown in the 1950s, has always been a bit of a rarefied pursuit.  However, you and I are talking to each other no less than before.  In fact, using the technologies available to us, we're probably talking more than ever and about many more subjects than before.

The problem comes when we think about this in relation to the way we manage our society and polity.  Conversations are at the heart of our assumptions public realm, from community groups to parent-teacher meetings; however,  the ways in which we have them have changed.  We blog, we skype, we chat, and we comment about different things and on different sites that represent our many different interests.   We are simply having conversations in different ways that are not necessarily reflected in the conventional means of representing communities.  The challenge comes in how we reconnect the two.

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