Write letters? Please WhatsApp
The
thumbs restlessly keep pressing the remote while playing video games at a
playstation. The fingers don’t tire out of pushing the buttons while texting
messages and WhatsApping at a rapid rate.
In
the age of instant e-mailing, e-commerce and Wi-Fi communication, writing by
hand is gradually becoming a neglected habit. People may suggest lack of time
and a fast-paced lifestyle to opt for the keyboard over pen-pencil and paper.
But the question that’s cropping up in every mind these days is whether
handwriting would fade into oblivion in the near future?
From
the previous rage of a rattling typewriter in offices to today’s keying in trend
over computers for both formal and personal work, technology has apparently
taken over manual labour in many respects. “Well, internet is not only a huge
hit today but an indispensable tool of the current century. Our existence will
have no value without it or will be rather difficult in its absence,” says
Mumbai-based ad professional Jyotish Achrekar.
However,
the old school literates still vouch for their adherence to traditional writing
methods, which is by hand with the aid of kalam (pen) or pencil. Noted Bengali
litterateur Debesh Roy clearly conveys his fascination for the chaos that
scattered pens and papers build up in his study-room. “Computers are indeed
blessed with a huge storage capacity but they offer a fixed boxy shape to the
eye. The picture that a blank white canvas can conjure up through a writer’s
vision while shaping up short stories or a lengthy novel is just incomparable,”
shares the veteran author.
“Obviously
the cyber-world is more technically sound. You can smoothly iron out those
erroneous creases with editing commands like delete, undo, re-do,
cut-copy-paste and so on. But I have been used to making mistakes, scratching
them off quite frequently and then tearing out the paper to trash it like a
crushed ball into the rubbish bin. Honestly, I am more comfortable in this
space of rectifying and rewriting. I can’t escape that routine,” he says.
Another
doyen ace poet Sankha Ghosh who refuses to accept this change of flexibility
echoed similar sentiments. “I’m still holding the pen tightly and consider it
mightier than any sharp-edged sword. I know tomorrow there could be a deluge of
webzines or e-zines to woo us authors, but I’m adamant to budge an inch from
the print world where handwritten manuscripts are still welcomed by a swarm of
publishers,” he reasons for his rejection to switch gears from a pen to pen
drive.
Former
journalist Sayed Hasmat Jalal used to face a strange dichotomy between his
conscience as a writer and his scribe’s job-profile. “I would use gel pens for
my newspaper articles but often exacting deadlines would prompt me to key in
the matter. One advantage of this technology is that it indicates the exact
number of words required to fill in the available space in news columns. But
for composing poetry, stories and treatises, I find writing with the hand more
convenient for sure,” asserts the man, who has now turned into a full-fledged
writer. Contemporary correspondents will obviously resort to dicta-phones and
other voice recording options before filing their final copies on the office
machine.
Many
may argue about the tangibility and intangibility of things. “The physical
presence of a library or a bookstore is far more exciting than ordering online
through Flipkart or Amazon. I understand that today’s junk-snack fed youngsters
who are always on the go would naturally take recourse to such options and even
happily read on the Kindle on board. But I would seriously like to invite all
of them to walk in at a bookshop and browse books over a sip of coffee at its
adjacent café. You know, it’s nothing like smelling those crispy fresh pages of
a brand new printed book and feeling its glossy cover,” suggests writer and
bookstore owner Colonel Kaushik Sircar. “How many of us can resist the
allurement of a bookfair or a literary fest. Don’t we mob its stalls or gather
in front of an interactive forum discussion?” he says.
Source | Asian Age | 22 March 2016
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Librarian
Khaitan
& Co
Upcoming
Event | National Conference on Future Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence
(NCFL 2016) during April 22-23, 2016.
Note
| If anybody use these post for forwarding in any social media coverage or
covering in the Newsletter please give due credit to those who are taking
efforts for the same.
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