Posts tagged “reading” from longer posts

July 27, 2008
Is Our Children Reading?

The latest salvo in the on-going debate over the future of reading comes from the New York Times' Motoko Rich.

There's this great photo accompanying the story in which the Sims family (great name!) of Old Greenwich, Connecticut, is gathered in their living room. Mom is clutching a newspaper, Dad a book, and their two teenage kids are staring at laptops. Son Zachary, it turns out, consumes something like 200 RSS feeds a day, an amount of content that Mom finds "mind boggling," but not particularly distressing. But more concerning to the parents is the great deal of time daughter Emma's spends online playing games and connecting up with friends.

Thing is, both kids appear to be doing the very same thing. But they're clearly engaged in different pursuits. And that's basically the Steven Johnson argument -- that we're using a bunk definition of "reading" if we're limiting it to ink-and-paper books and newspapers, and not taking into account all the text we take in online. There was this great story from the British Library's main reading room a few months back where old-timers complained that the new batch of researchers just didn't look like they're working, because they're click-click-clicking away at computers instead of being hunched over tomes. That definition of "working" is fairly dated. Our definition of reading is also pretty archaic.

Now me, I like books, like 'em a lot. Ever since I was a wee one, I've loved putting the effort into seeing through one person's vision for a few hundred pages of commitment. I do struggle a bit to find time for them now. Time spent consuming all the wonderful stuff online -- whether it's Boing Boing or nytimes.com -- is time not spent reading full books. Whether or not that's a loss for the universe is the big question, but I do personally find myself wishing I spent more time on actual books.

Of course, the boring but probably pretty spot-on answer to this is, ho-hum, balance. Maybe we all are gorging a bit on digital content right now, what with it being all free and delicious! So maybe something useful the National Endowment for the Arts -- a big participant in these reading debates -- could do is to mock up a reading pyramid like the one we have for food. Give us a useful guide to balancing our textual consumption.


books, journalism, reading

Posts tagged “reading” from shorter posts

July 22, 2008
A Kindle in Every Pocket
What the Kindle needs to do to go mainstream.
Kindle, reading

June 20, 2008
How the Internet is Changing Literary Style
Caleb Crain on How the Internet is Changing Literary Style. (Apologies for my failure to thx anyone here. I bookmarked the link forever ago, like this morning, and have completely forgotten whence it came. My bad. I blame the Internet.)
literature, reading, the Internet, writing

June 16, 2008
How We, Ahem, "Read" Online

online content, reading

May 19, 2008
The Future of Reading
Ezra Klein explains that despite its misplaced "next page" button, the Kindle is a demonstration of how reading might evolve from dead-tree books to iterative, collaborative experience.

I seriously tempted to buy a Kindle, but I'm still too attached to the idea of books as discrete objects that can be stacked in the corner when I'm done with them. At least that way I know that when the revolution comes, Jeff Bezos be damned, I'll have something to read.

Kindle, reading, social technologies


Nancy Scola I'm a Brooklyn-based writer obsessed with technology, networks, social organizing, and the politics of food. This is my online home where I talk about those things and whatever else strikes my fancy. Learn More

Of Note: Our Fractured Food Safety System [Science Progress], Facebook Activism [AlterNet], Tag Magazine




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Is Our Children Reading?
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