theo|digital

missional theology. digital media ecology. biscuits and gravy.
  • rss
  • Home
  • About Chris
    • Me / Bio
    • Research Thesis
    • My Personal Vision
    • Connections
    • Other Writing
    • As a Missionary
  • Theo | Digital Basics
    • What is media ecology?
    • What is contextual theology?
    • Toy, Tool, Environment
    • About theo|digital
  • Archive
    • theo|digital archive
    • Jesus Under Plastic

why late trains don’t matter (they’re art) | train 1

Chris Ridgeway | 19 Jan 2010 | 17:23

Today I’m doing something I’ve never done before.  The California Zephyr is one of the longest train routes in North America, and I’m about to ride it.  All 2, 438 miles of it—from Chicago’s Union Station to the edge of San Francisco.  The route traces through Chicago, Omaha, Denver, Salt Lake City, and Reno before arriving in California, and it became famous for its views of the Rocky Mountains and the American West.  Apparently for the car attendants too, who at the height of train travel post-WWII played the role of perky young stewardesses, offering smiles and full-service attention, from coffee to babysitting the kids while you were in the lounge.  Today it’s obviously changed a bit, but you can still ride as a first class passenger in a sleeper Superliner, which includes amenities like the morning paper, fresh towels and sheets, and priority all-you-can-eat reservations in the Dining Car.  As an antique experience that I’ve never had, it felt perfect for a short vacation, offering something novel while providing a chance to be by myself and write and pray and think.

The trip officially takes 50 hours–mine leaves on 2pm Tuesday in Chicago, travels for two overnights, and arrives in San Francisco at 4:05pm.  Although nobody really believes that’s when it’ll get in.  Amtrak trains have the distinction of having “on-time” being a bonus.  I think if it’s up to 3 hours late, Amtrak practically considers that on time.  Past that you can start to complain a little, although it’s not like you’re gonna just get out and walk.  A few weeks ago, this very train route made the news for having a train that was stopped by snow and showed up over 18 hours late.  Ouch.

And while coming in the following day might be cause enough for some attention, what’s funny to me is how uneventful the poor timing is normally.  Nobody cares.  Part of this is that they are simply meeting expectation–there’s nothing new here.  But media ecology’s approach to technological progress in society probably has the best explanation.  People don’t think of trains as transportation.  They’re art.

That’s because newer technologies (i.e. I’m leavin’ on a jet plane) have supplanted the train as the primary means of cross-country movement in the U.S.  And newer technologies often don’t replace previous technologies as much as modify their role in our cultural perceptions.  For Marshall McLuhan, this means that some older technologies remain in place as–but as art!  His most famous observation on this:

The machine turned nature into an art form.  For the first time man began to regard Nature as a source of aesthetic and spiritual values.  They began to marvel that earlier ages had been so unaware of the world of Nature as Art.

Think National Parks as vacation destinations.  This is a result of the assembly line.

And that’s why people don’t care if trains are late.  I’m riding the train because it a novelty item, and I learned about it reading blogs that are devoted to people who do just that.  Newer technologies have modified our perceptions.

ps – can’t wait to see what this is like.  More if I can from the train, but chances are pretty low I’ll have good access as I’d be depending on what flashes of Spring 3G I can catch from the train car.

Show Comments(5) Hide Comments(5)
Categories
Personal/Me/Fun/Other, Sidetrack, Theo|Digital
Tags
mcluhan, Media Ecology, personal, transportation, travel
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback

missional learning commons

Chris Ridgeway | 8 Jan 2010 | 08:13

deeper-churchToday I’ll be heading down to the Missional Learning Commons “non-conference” hosted in Ft. Wayne Indiana with friends from my church Life on the Vine.  I’ve seen this informal gathering/discussion pop up over the last few years, but now that I know personally a few people who engage in it (Dave Ftich), I’ve been persuaded to join in.   I was also surprised to see my friend JR Woodward tweeting that he was on his way, so it promises to be a thoughtful (and probably lively) crowd.

This is a good thing for me after about a week of serious downtime in Champaign, IL, visiting friends at my old church I-Life at the University of Illinois.  The downstate time was an oasis between the intensity of GCM IGNITE 2009 in Columbus Ohio (where I served as the asst. director of the conference), and my coming big transitions.

I’m storing up a packload of digital theology kinda thoughts, but they’re gonna have to wait for now.

ps – Happy Epiphany.  Isa 60.

Add Comment Collapse
Categories
Personal/Me/Fun/Other
Tags
I-Life, Missional Church, personal, travel
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback

soft-launching www.theodigital.com

Chris Ridgeway | 24 Dec 2009 | 23:17

Well, I’m soft-launching my new blog here on Christmas Eve (of all times), although it’s not really new.  We know that I’ve been blogging for years over at http://chrisridgeway.blogspot.com.  It’s had several names (blog names always feel somewhat dispensable), including “To Have Mine Match” and most recently “Jesus Under Plastic.”  This time, it felt right to move to a whole new platform—so I’ve got my own WordPress 2.9 install all spiffed up now and my own new domain:   www.theodigital.com.

My domain www.chrisridgeway.net will direct here soon, and I still plan to keep personal news and family and friends with me.  But  because I’ve spent the last 1.5 years focused on the intersection of digital media ecology and theology, I didn’t want to stop when the degree did.  This name gives me a space to think and do theology as a digital native, and simultaneously try to do that in the missional conversation.

There’s still a lot of stuff not right on here (Feedburner isn’t working properly, tags aren’t correctly implemented, I have some introduction pages that I need to write, and I’m not too excited about the webcam pic on the left).  But this is good enough for now.

Also, Merry Christmas.  :)

Show Comments(5) Hide Comments(5)
Categories
Uncategorized
Tags
personal, tech
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback

Other Theo|Digital Thinkers

  • A.K.M. Adam
  • Jesse Rice
  • John Dyer
  • Read Schuchardt
  • Shane Hipps
  • The Second Eclectic
  • Tim Challies

Media Ecology

  • Lance Strate
  • Marshall McLuhan
  • Media Ecology Association
  • Neil Postman
  • Walter Ong

Connections & Friends

  • Alan Hable
  • Alastair Sterne
  • Dan Clark (Doma)
  • Dave Fitch
  • Great Commision Ministries
  • Hexanine (Tim Lapetino)
  • Illini Life Christian Fellowship
  • Jesus Creed | Scot McKnight
  • Jonathan King
  • JR Rozko
  • JR Woodward
  • Justin Johnson
  • Keeping Southern (Jennifer O)
  • Life on the Vine
  • Nick Modrzejewski
  • North Park Theological Seminary
  • The Ecclesia Network
  • Ty Grigg

Digital Trends

  • Facebook's Blog
  • Know Your Meme
  • Mashable
  • Pew Internet
  • Seth Godin
  • TwitterFall
  • Wired News

More

  • Clover Sites
  • Logos Bible Software Blog

Currently Reading

Creative Commons License
theo|digital by Chris Ridgeway is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

About Me

Chris Ridgeway

Retro-identity idea: define yourself by magazines. Me? Wired. Paste. Atlantic Monthly. Discipleship Journal. Or this: For ten years I've worked as a leadership coach, spiritual director, and free agent missionary with Great Commission Ministries on its mission to reach the next generation--I currently serve as the national Staff Program Manager for GCM, helping train and equip church planters, campus missionaries , and other missional leaders. My area of curiosity is the impact of an information society on Christian theology, especially a doctrine of scripture. Does text messaging modify our view of the Trinity? Oh yeah, and I'm inexcusably addicted to breakfast diners. New home base: Orlando, FL. Home home: Chicago-ish.

My Status Updates

  • Facebook Syndication Error

    (Updated 0 minutes ago)

rss Comments rss valid xhtml 1.1 design by jide powered by Wordpress get firefox