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In his deliberately provocative and deeply nihilistic new book, Reality Hunger, the onetime novelist David Shields asserts that fiction has never seemed less central to the culture's sense of itself.

He says he's bored by out-and-out fabrication, by myself and others; bored by invented plots and invented characters and much more interested in confession and reality-based art. His own book can be taken as Exhibit A in what he calls recombinant or appropriation art.

Mr. Shields's book consists of 618 fragments, including hundreds of quotations taken from other writers like Philip Roth, Joan Didion and Saul Bellow quotations that Mr. Shields, 53, has taken out of context and in some cases, he says, also revised, at least a little for the sake of compression, consistency or whim. He only acknowledges the source of these quotations in an appendix, which he says his publishers lawyers insisted he add.

Who owns the words? Mr. Shields asks in a passage that is itself an unacknowledged reworking of remarks by the cyberpunk author William Gibson. Who owns the music and the rest of our culture? We do all of us though not all of us know it yet. Reality cannot be copyrighted.

Mr. Shields's pasted-together book and defense of appropriation underscore the contentious issues of copyright, intellectual property and plagiarism that have become prominent in a world in which the Internet makes copying and recycling as simple as pressing a couple of buttons. In fact, the dynamics of the Web, as the artist and computer scientist Jaron Lanier observes in another new book, are encouraging authors, journalists, musicians and artists to treat the fruits of their intellects and imaginations as fragments to be given without pay to the hive mind.

Its not just a question of how these content producers are supposed to make a living or finance their endeavors, however, or why they ought to allow other people to pick apart their work and filch choice excerpts. Nor is it simply a question of experts and professionals being challenged by an increasingly democratized marketplace. Its also a question, as Mr. Lanier, 49, astutely points out in his new book, You Are Not a Gadget, of how online collectivism, social networking and popular software designs are changing the way people think and process information, a question of what becomes of originality and imagination in a world that prizes metaness and regards the mash-up as more important than the sources who were mashed.

Mr. Lanier's book, which makes an impassioned case for a digital humanism, is only one of many recent volumes to take a hard but judicious look at some of the consequences of new technology and Web 2.0. Among them are several prescient books by Cass Sunstein, 55, which explore the effects of the Internet on public discourse; Farhad Manjoo's True Enough, which examines how new technologies are promoting the cultural ascendancy of belief over fact; The Cult of the Amateur, by Andrew Keen, which argues that Web 2.0 is creating a digital forest of mediocrity and substituting ill-informed speculation for genuine expertise; and Nicholas Carr's book The Shallows (coming in June), which suggests that increased Internet use is rewiring our brains, impairing our ability to think deeply and creatively even as it improves our ability to multitask.

Unlike Digital Barbarism, Mark Helprin's shrill 2009 attack on copyright abolitionists, these books are not the work of Luddites or technophobes. Mr. Lanier is a Silicon Valley veteran and a pioneer in the development of virtual reality; Mr. Manjoo, 31, is Slate's technology columnist; Mr. Keen is a technology entrepreneur; and Mr. Sunstein is a Harvard Law School professor who now heads the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. Rather, these authors books are nuanced ruminations on some of the unreckoned consequences of technological change books that stand as insightful counterweights to early techno-utopian works like Esther Dyson's Release 2.0 and Nicholas Negroponte's Being Digital, which took an almost Pollyannaish view of the Web and its capacity to empower users.

THESE NEW BOOKS share a concern with how digital media are reshaping our political and social landscape, molding art and entertainment, even affecting the methodology of scholarship and research. They examine the consequences of the fragmentation of data that the Web produces, as news articles, novels and record albums are broken down into bits and bytes; the growing emphasis on immediacy and real-time responses; the rising tide of data and information that permeates our lives; and the emphasis that blogging and partisan political Web sites place on subjectivity.

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