The death of letter writing
Every once in a while I'll hear a friend, family member, or colleague bring up the fact that letter writing, a once beautiful communication platform, has since been slain and replaced by email and instant messaging. I myself remember hand writing letters to my best out-of-town friends when I was a kid, mostly those who had moved away from Cooperstown or caught my eye at summer camp. A trip to the mailbox in my adolescent days certainly had a different feel than it does today. But I dare say that even though today's peer-to-peer messages don't have the ink smears, stickers, lipstick prints or the other qualities that we loved about letters, our social relationships with one another continue to thrive and our understanding of each others' thoughts, feelings, and plans for the future has only improved.
Though handwritten letters may have gone the way of the milkman, our capacity for communication has scaled proportionately with our improving infrastructure and technology. As the internet flourishes, so do social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook, adding thousands of new users daily. And with more people to talk to, our personalized messages to one another have transformed from elegant & personal to lowercase & efficient. But I don't necessarily view this as a bad thing.
When I wrote letters to long lost friends and family members, a majority of their content comprised of updates about my everyday activities: who I was hanging out with, where I had gone on vacation, where I was working, and what music I was listening to. These details weren't customized for the recipient, but they were nonetheless important. Today, those "Scott-specific" life details that I want to share with everyone are delivered by a single Facebook profile instead of by dozens of of individual letters.
Because of the inherent redundancy of the essential common, non-personalized details, letter writing was an inefficient way of meeting our "keeping-in-touch" communication needs. It was a time consuming process that forced us to either make extra time for writing or pick and choose our recipients. Now, the substance of our messages can be more relevant and customized for each friend, as much of the overhead is handled by our online bulletin boards. This lets us keep in touch with more people with less effort.
A criticized downside of our current forms of electronic communication is the degraded quality of individual messages; we don't write with the same beauty and prose as our ancestors. However, I believe that our beautiful, prosaic writing has simply shifted to another platform. As technology enables me to share my photos, status updates, profile information, and efficient instant messages with my friends, I am able to concentrate my real writing elsewhere. The way I see it, real writing is far from its death. And the capabilities of electronic socialization combined with our ability to communicate with more people compensate for potentially lower quality language and grammar in our personalized messages.
After all, why do most of us communicate with our friends? To impress them with acrobatic linguistics? Or to tell them what we're up to, consult them for advice, and remind them that we care?
Though handwritten letters may have gone the way of the milkman, our capacity for communication has scaled proportionately with our improving infrastructure and technology. As the internet flourishes, so do social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook, adding thousands of new users daily. And with more people to talk to, our personalized messages to one another have transformed from elegant & personal to lowercase & efficient. But I don't necessarily view this as a bad thing.
When I wrote letters to long lost friends and family members, a majority of their content comprised of updates about my everyday activities: who I was hanging out with, where I had gone on vacation, where I was working, and what music I was listening to. These details weren't customized for the recipient, but they were nonetheless important. Today, those "Scott-specific" life details that I want to share with everyone are delivered by a single Facebook profile instead of by dozens of of individual letters.
Because of the inherent redundancy of the essential common, non-personalized details, letter writing was an inefficient way of meeting our "keeping-in-touch" communication needs. It was a time consuming process that forced us to either make extra time for writing or pick and choose our recipients. Now, the substance of our messages can be more relevant and customized for each friend, as much of the overhead is handled by our online bulletin boards. This lets us keep in touch with more people with less effort.
A criticized downside of our current forms of electronic communication is the degraded quality of individual messages; we don't write with the same beauty and prose as our ancestors. However, I believe that our beautiful, prosaic writing has simply shifted to another platform. As technology enables me to share my photos, status updates, profile information, and efficient instant messages with my friends, I am able to concentrate my real writing elsewhere. The way I see it, real writing is far from its death. And the capabilities of electronic socialization combined with our ability to communicate with more people compensate for potentially lower quality language and grammar in our personalized messages.
After all, why do most of us communicate with our friends? To impress them with acrobatic linguistics? Or to tell them what we're up to, consult them for advice, and remind them that we care?
Labels: communication, facebook, handwritten, letter, letter writing, myspace, profile, social networking, socialization, socialize, technology, writing


5 Comments:
At August 14, 2008 2:07 PM ,
Steve said...
I agree with everything you talked about. It pisses me off when people say writing letters is a lost art.
It should be a lost art, just like making thatch roofs or clay pipes for plumbing. If I have something important to say to someone, writing a letter is currently the least effective, least reliable, most expensive, slowest way to do so.
That said, I do see and understand the point people make that online communication is largely lacking as far as personal, human touch. It is nice to get a handwritten thank you note or a nicely made wedding invitation in the mail. It does show more thought and effort being put into the contact. It's nice. But it is not an effective way to keep in touch, for all the reasons you went over.
While writing letters might be a lost art, personal communication is far from a lost art - the opposite is true. The personal touch is quickly coming to online communication. My whole family recently got Skype (free, skype.com). I regularly talk to my parents and brothers with video chat. Face to Face. Like I was sitting in the room. A letter does not get that personal or have that much of a human element.
I don't think letters will stop being used anytime soon. They are simply being relegated to communication that is not time critical or benefits from physical presence - like a note with a present, or a letter from a bank to verify a physical address.
Online communication will keep getting more and more satisfying on a human level. Pining over handwritten letters is pretty pointless and a little sad. Enjoy the new ways of doing things, old people. :)
At August 14, 2008 9:19 PM ,
Kit said...
I gotta throw in a vote for real written communication sent via the USPS--at least every now & then.
It's satisfying to me in a very REAL & tactile way about typing a letter on an old-ass typewriter, folding the thing and then stuffing it into a paper envelope which I then--as if that whole process hadn't been personal enough--have to LICK (twice if you include the stamp).
When's the last time you licked your monitor?
Okay, maybe not YOU, Bliss.
Two cents: in.
-Bland
P.S. I can decorate the envelope too.
Please seehttp://www.clairedurantkenny.com/2008/08/from-mail-bag.html for evidence of a recent letter/card I mailed to someone.
The adult said in response: "It's my favorite piece of mail ever..."
At August 15, 2008 6:07 AM ,
Scott Bliss said...
This post has been removed by the author.
At August 15, 2008 6:10 AM ,
Scott Bliss said...
I agree that handwritten letters definitely have their place. I love to send postcards when I'm on vacation. I'm also a stickler for thank-you notes. And if I'm writing something important, it's nice to stuff it in an envelope and taste some adhesive.
Essentially, I'm trying to say that in the past, we used to rely on letters as a primary method of communication. Our newly adapted methods like email, IMs, and message boards tend to use the English language differently than letters did; and I don't necessarily think it's a bad thing.
On another note, I LOVE mailing stuff to people -- like three-dimensional stuff. I'm still like a kid in that I love getting crap in the mail. Try using the post office's site. You'll need an ink jet printer, a scale, and some tape, but you'll save money (postage is cheaper if you buy it online) and never have to go to the post office again.
At August 23, 2008 12:11 PM ,
Michelle Bliss said...
So here's my beef: I understand that talking through email, Facebook, and IM is easy, fast, and efficient. But I don't think most people (including myself, too often) know what specific types of information should be communicated in a mode that is again, easy, fast, and efficient. For example, online birthday wishes (which most of us only get because Facebook has birthday reminders) suck. They just plain suck.
That's because it's the in-between relationships that suffer. Yes, we send birthday cards to our family and BFFs. But what about our in-between friends? There are relationships that we should be cultivating, like people did in the good ol' days, with handwritten notes--physical artifacts to show people that they ARE worth the time and effort it takes to send a thoughtful card. But it's so easy to send the same message online...except, a message online really isn't the same message, at all.
TO BE CONTINUED:
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