Privacy
-
- $12.99
-
- $12.99
Publisher Description
American essayist and Harper's contributing editor Garret Keizer offers a brilliant, literate look at our strip-searched, over-shared, viral-videoed existence.
Body scans at the airport, candid pics on Facebook, a Twitter account for your stray thoughts, and a surveillance camera on every street corner -- today we have an audience for all of the extraordinary and banal events of our lives. The threshold between privacy and exposure becomes more permeable by the minute. But what happens to our private selves when we cannot escape scrutiny, and to our public personas when they pass from our control?
In this wide-ranging, penetrating addition to the Big Ideas//Small Books series, and in his own unmistakable voice, Garret Keizer considers the moral dimensions of privacy in relation to issues of social justice, economic inequality, and the increasing commoditization of the global marketplace. Though acutely aware of the digital threat to privacy rights, Keizer refuses to see privacy in purely technological terms or as an essentially legalistic value. Instead, he locates privacy in the human capacity for resistance and in the sustainable society "with liberty and justice for all."
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Critically acclaimed author Keizer (The Unwanted Sound of Everything We Want) writes elegantly about the devastating effect the electronic, post-9/11 age has had on the concept of privacy. After surveying a host of definitions of privacy, he offers his own "I would ground privacy in a creaturely resistance to being used against one's will" and then catalogues the many affronts to privacy in the personal and public lives of ordinary citizens. To underscore the dangers in devaluing privacy, Keizer uses examples of both the ordinary incursions into everyday life (such as his own sense of betrayal when a friend shared his letters without his approval) and the notorious (Rutgers student Dharun Ravi's webcam exposure of roommate Tyler Clementi's liaison with another male student). Keizer ably describes the disturbing and ever-diminishing expectations of privacy; for example, he notes court opinions that allow the press to publish facts about anyone who, "willingly or not," finds his or her way into a newsworthy event, and makes a cogent analysis of the threats to privacy that accompany smartphones and other digital devices. Keizer's commentary reaches deeply into the fabric of post 9/11 America and finds a landscape that has compromised the fundamental human need for privacy, and argues passionately for the value of privacy in a democratic society