> And I do think as a writer my job of course has changed dramatically in the
> last thirty years because of this new technology [смартфоны, Интернет]. So
> when I began writing, say in 1995, I would go to Tibet or Cuba and I would
> assume that none of my friends or neighbours or potential readers here would
> ever have a chance to go to those places. So my job was to take in as many
> sights and sounds and smells as possible, to import to people who have no
> chance of seeing Tibet or Cuba. Now anyone of us in this room tonight can go
> back to our bedrooms and access on YouTube scenes from Cuba or, on Discovery
> channel, corners of Tibet that I could never go to. So as a writer you have
> to claim those places that no video camera or tape recorder or multimedia
> instrument can do better. And that's an interesting challenge for the writer
> to face, because most of the territories that I would try to claim, or
> literature would try to claim now, are internal ones. I think they have to do
> with memory or silence or some personal engagement or ambiguity. If I go to
> Iran next week I can't bring Iran more vividly home to you than a CNN show
> could. But I can follow some invisible, inner investigation into Iran that
> maybe they wouldn't be able to do so well visually or orally. So that's one
> way in which writing has changed.
Weapons of Mass Distraction with Pico Iyer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpDpVoM1Yy8&t=35m32s