Abstract
In this paper, I wish to show how new technologies come to alter one’s initial enjoyment and
comportment towards a hobby. What I show is that new technologies serve to transform leisurely
activities into a technique, in the Ellulian sense of the term. I begin from the outside in, as it were, by
first articulating what I take a hobby to be. Secondly, I then examine the time-honoured pastime of fishing
to show that new technologies, if utilized, either cause the hobby to take on aspects of traditional work or
in other cases, causes the hobbyist to quit the activity because the hobby is now deemed undesirable; the
technological advancement makes the hobby too easy. Thirdly and finally, I turn my attention to another
kind of hobby or leisurely activity, which some have called “Facebooking.” Looking at Facebook through
an Ellulian lens, there are, to be sure, some rather unsettling aspects of the activity, but despite this, all is
not lost; Facebook may be used as a tool to practice the Ellulian virtue of non-selectivity.