
Blake Eskin|Observer Quarterly
June 10, 2016
White Lines

On the subway, where the vast majority of other people are strangers, barriers have their virtues, and before pocket-sized touchscreens, the most effective form of urban insulation was a pair of headphones. The Sony Walkman and its imitators came with wired, foam-covered plastic earmuffs that carried an electric signal from a cassette, converted it into sound waves that travel through the middle ear, then encoded it again and fed the signal to the listener’s brain. Headphones make an individual on a crowded subway or a busy street into an island in the stream. They give the illusion of privacy and solitude in places where there is none, and make the city livable.
++++
Observed
View all
Observed
By Blake Eskin
Related Posts
Recent Posts
Runway modeler: Airport architect Sameedha Mahajan on sending ever-more people skyward The New Era of Design Leadership with Tony Bynum Head in the boughs: ‘Designed Forests’ author Dan Handel on the interspecies influences that shape our thickety relationship with nature A Mastercard for Pigs? How Digital Infrastructure is Transforming Farming and Fighting PovertyRelated Posts