Publishers Weekly
05/27/2019
Psychologist Cavanagh (The Spark of Learning) sheds a positive light on the human hive mind—which she loosely defines as collective human consciousness—in this thought-provoking, if sometimes strained, study. She weighs the deep-rooted human fear of losing one’s individuality against recent research suggesting humans exercise little control to start with over their emotions, attitudes, and decisions. Cavanagh’s thoroughly contemporary take on the hive mind is inexorably connected to online platforms, but she also takes care to consider the real-world consequences of collective thinking, traveling to Charlottesville, Va., soon after the clash between white nationalists and antifascists in 2017 to interview a psychologist about the importance of group identity for humans. While acknowledging that online interactions have sparked conflicts, Cavanagh argues that such platforms are also “drawing us closer together, introducing new ways of connecting, and extending our cognitive horizons.” As hard as she tries to prove her point, she does a better job illustrating the negative side effects of social media and other forms of online communication, such as post-traumatic stress disorder associated with viewing traumatic video posts. Despite sometimes being less than convincing, this well-documented and wide-reaching account of individuality and interconnectedness should engage anyone interested in the intersection between psychology, neuroscience, and recent trends in social media and technology. Agent: Jessica Papin, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (Sept.)
From the Publisher
Normal0falsefalsefalseEN-USX-NONEX-NONEMicrosoftInternetExplorer4 "[Cavanagh] masterfully bridges the world between research and popular narrative nonfiction in her fascinating, beautifully written book."—Chicago Tribune
"With wit and curiosity, Cavanagh explores the notion that human beings are not so much solitary individuals as profoundly social creatures... After raising questions about forms of technology we take for granted, she offers sensible, workable suggestions as to how we can navigate the gap between the individual and the collective in everyday life. An engaging new perspective on human networking."—Kirkus Reviews (starredreview)
"Hivemind provides a fascinating tour of research that reveals our social nature, for good and for bad. Cavanagh is a natural teacher whose enthusiasm for psychology shines through on every page. Whether you're looking to have healthier technology habits, develop better relationships with others, or address societal challenges, this book will give you food for thought and wisdom to take action."—Kelly McGonigal, author of The Joy of Movement and The Willpower Instinct
Thank goodness that Sarah Rose Cavanagh is here to help us make sense of what can feel like a deeply polarized and tribal world. This fascinating book guides us through the nuanced landscape of why we think and behave the way we doonline and offand offers a much-needed vision for how we can find our way back from the edge.—Scott Barry Kaufman, author of Wired to Create
"Cavanagh brings you along on her journey through an exquisite collection of scholarly knowledge and empirical insight to ground both your mind and your gut. From zombies to bees, moral panics to conspiracy theories, Hivemind mixes the dark with the light to help readers find a path through a very destabilizing present"—danah boyd, author of It's Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens
Kirkus Reviews
★ 2019-07-17
A guardedly optimistic examination of the impact of social media suggests a reconsideration of its pros and cons.
With wit and curiosity, Cavanagh (Psychology/Assumption Coll.; The Spark of Learning: Energizing the College Classroom With the Science of Emotion, 2016, etc.) explores the notion that human beings are not so much solitary individuals as profoundly social creatures, perhaps, like honeybees, "at least partly a collective species." And that's not a bad thing. We are born with the ability to tune into the feelings of others, and we develop that ability through the telling and, more recently, the reading or writing of stories, all of which makes us more likely to empathize with other human beings and members of other species rather than seeing them as "other." Now, "with the advent of social media and smartphones," writes the author, "we have an entire new medium through which we can connect, synchronize with, and influence one another." Rather than isolating individuals, as popular opinion might suggest, social media gives us "an ever-present awareness of our friends and lovers moving through their separate real-life space, eating and creating and thinking and feeling." Though Cavanagh doesn't overlook the possibly detrimental effects of new media, which include political polarization and the proliferation of conspiracy theories, her general outlook is hopeful. She grounds her more abstract speculations in particular examples, from her experiences and those of others, in a way that makes her ideas easy for readers to grasp. She chronicles her discussions with beekeepers, a talk with a religious historian about zombies, a weekend with old friends, and the interactions of young women as they wait outside a hotel where someone has seen a pop star. After raising questions about forms of technology we take for granted, she offers sensible, workable suggestions as to how we can navigate the gap between the individual and the collective in everyday life.
An engaging new perspective on human networking.