Translations
The following translations are reader-submitted, and I’m very grateful to the contributors. Read the manifesto in:
- Farsi, translated by bamdadi
- Portugese, translated by Gabriel ‘Dread’ Siqueira
- German, translated by Jürgen Kummer
The following translations are reader-submitted, and I’m very grateful to the contributors. Read the manifesto in:
A few people have written to ask for advice on putting the idea of slow blogging into practice. There’s no template or specific requirement about the form of posts on a slow blog. They might be long, short, only words, words and photos, only photos, only video… you get the idea.
There are, though, some considerations I use that could be helpful in finding a footing with a deliberately slow creative path.
Following the New York Times article, there’s been some commentary on the idea of slow blogging, which I make no specific claim to, and some on the manifesto itself. It’s been nothing short of interesting and entertaining to take it all in, and it seems appropriate to respond.
To everyone who stopped by to give the manifesto a read, a heartfelt thanks. Some took away enough from the Times article or the manifesto to write their own thoughtful posts, and I’ve highlighted a few of those below. I’ve been bookmarking these posts as I find them and they now appear in the sidebar with their own RSS feed.
Temporary Note: forgive the compressed formatting in the sidebar; it’s momentarily beyond my skills to fix but will be addressed in good order.
It seems worthwhile to call extra attention to a few of those responses.
Those are just a few, and I encourage you to check out the other linked items as they’re definitely worth reading.
For one, I’ve moved the manifesto here, under my personal site, for now. I’ll continue to bookmark things I find elsewhere on the slow blog idea, and those will automagically appear in the sidebar and the links RSS feed.
There have been some direct inquiries about how to go about making a slow blog work beyond the intentions set out in the manifesto. I started to respond to these directly, but realize it makes more sense to offer what practical advice I can in a page of its own.
I’ve also found that some ideas I’ve wanted to write about for a while haven’t really found a home yet, and that maybe that alone qualifies them as grist for a slow-blog mill. With that, the goal is to post at minimum once per season and mark the four major points of the year with a written offering.
I’ve been using the web in some way since about 1995. It’s where I work and some of the glue I use to keep my personal and social life together. My passion for it comes and goes, and more often than I’d like to admit I descend into a bland kind of cynicism over what I find there. The slow blog experience though has reminded me that the best thing about the web when I first used it is still the best thing about it 13 years later: connecting with people on an idea and shared values.
Slow Blog is a writing experiment that I started in 2006, then dropped, then picked up again in 2008. Its purpose is to bring creativity back to the human timescale, rather than allow it to be dictated by the ever-faster moving web.
Read the Slow Blog Manifesto, and say yes to fast only when you feel fast.
With the return of Slow Blog comes a dedication to thoughtfulness and words carefully chosen. Old writing will find a new home; new writing will happen when it happens, no less than once per season.