A theme of the age, at least in the developed world, is that people crave silence and can find none. The roar of traffic, the ceaseless beep of phones, digital announcements in buses and trains, TV sets blaring even in empty offices, are an endless battery and distraction. The human race is exhausting itself with noise and longs for its opposite—whether in the wilds, on the wide ocean or in some retreat dedicated to stillness and concentration. Alain Corbin, a history professor, writes from his refuge in the Sorbonne, and Erling Kagge, a Norwegian explorer, from his memories of the wastes of Antarctica, where both have tried to escape.
And yet, as Mr Corbin points out in "A History of Silence", there is probably no more noise than there used to be. Before pneumatic tyres, city streets were full of the deafening clang of metal-rimmed wheels and horseshoes on stone. Before voluntary isolation on mobile phones, buses and trains rang with conversation. Newspaper-sellers did not leave their wares in a mute pile, but advertised them at top volume, as did vendors of cherries, violets and fresh mackerel. The theatre and the opera were a chaos of huzzahs and barracking. Even in the countryside, peasants sang as they drudged. They don’t sing now.
What has changed is not so much the level of noise, which previous centuries also complained about, but the level of distraction, which occupies the space that silence might invade. There looms another paradox, because when it does invade—in the depths of a pine forest, in the naked desert, in a suddenly vacated room—it often proves unnerving rather than welcome. Dread creeps in; the ear instinctively fastens on anything, whether fire-hiss or bird call or susurrus of leaves, that will save it from this unknown emptiness. People want silence, but not that much. | Stalnica današnjega časa je, še posebej v razvitem svetu, da ljudje hrepenijo po miru, ki ga pa nikakor ne morejo najti. Hrup prometa, neprestano oglašanje telefonov, digitalnih obvestil na avtobusih in vlakih, brnenje televizijskih sprejemnikov tudi v praznih pisarnah; vse samo en kup neskončnih nadlog in motenj. Človeštvo se utruja s hrupom in hrepeni po njegovem nasprotju, četudi je to v divjini, na širokem oceanu ali pa v nekakšnem počivališču, namenjeno mirnosti in koncentraciji. Alain Corbin, profesor zgodovine, piše iz svojega zatočišča v Sorboni ter Erling Kagge, norveški raziskovalec, iz svojih spominov antarktičnih puščav, kamor sta se oba poskušala zateči. Kljub temu, kot g. Corbin izpostavi v delu ''Zgodovina Tišine'' (''A History of Silence''), danes verjetno ni več hrupa kot ga je že bilo včasih. Pred pnevmatskimi kolesi so bile mestne ulice polne ropota koles, obrobljenih z železom, in udarcev podkev s kopit konjev ob kamen. Pred prostovoljno osamitvijo z mobilnimi telefoni so avtobusi in vlaki zveneli s pogovorom. Prodajalci časopisa niso pustili svojih izdelkov v nemem kupu, temveč so jih razglašali na ves glas, tako kot so to počeli prodajalci češenj, vijolic in svežih skuš. Gledališča in opere so bile kaos vzklikov in vzkrikov. Tudi na podeželju so kmetje peli med garanjem. Sedaj ne pojejo več. Kar se je spremenilo do danes ni stopnja hrupa, nad katerim so se pritoževala tudi prejšnja stoletja, temveč stopnja motenj, ki zavzemajo prostor, v katerega bi lahko vdrla tišina. Tu preži tudi drug paradoks, kajti takrat, ko dejansko vdre – v globino borovega gozda, v pusto puščavo, v nenadno izpraznjeno sobo – se velikokrat utemelji kot neprijetna in ne kot dobrodošla. Strah prileze notri. Uho se instinktivno napreza za čemerkoli, četudi je to prasketanje ognja, čivkanje ptic ali pa šušljanje listov, kar ga bo odrešilo te neznane praznine. Ljudje si želijo tišine, vendar ne toliko. |