Sleepytown is a
series of photographs taken between 7 and 10am on a Tuesday morning on the
Lawrence campus and the surrounding area. The project attempts to counteract
Marshall McLuhan’s idea of “allatonceness” (63) and “a world of total
involvement in which everybody is so profoundly involved with everybody else”
(61), as well as address “the humanity of the moment” and the possibility of “a
genuine connection between individuals” (Greenough 187-188). As a society,
social media and the process of being constantly connected to each other
consumes us just as much as we consume it. The idea of this series was to ask
whether we could remove ourselves from the busyness of “allatonceness” and
reconnect to ourselves, to our physical surroundings, and to our in-person
relationships.
I tried to order the photos to reflect the idea of waking
up, creating a gradient from solitary to social, cold to warm, impersonal to
personal. These photos attempt to make the everyday more visible in an attempt
to capture “the humanity of the moment” and a heightened awareness of our
surroundings.
And while I think the
series achieves this progression in some ways, in others it seems to remain
disconnected and distant. Several photos in a row show students absorbed in
their phones, making them seem far away no matter where the camera is or what
tone the photo has. The final photo of two students at a table in the café is
the closest we get to a look at an in-person relationship, but they aren’t
looking at each other, and they’re not speaking. So in this age of extreme
technological connectedness, how connected are we really? We should be aware of
how our technological connectedness affects our human connectedness, and that “allatonceness”
doesn’t necessarily translate to awareness of the things around us and of the
world at large. So we have to consciously make the commitment to be present in
our lives; we have to continue to find “the humanity in the moment.”
Click
here to view the photo set in Flickr. (Note: Start from the bottom up.)