Tag Archive for 'reading'

Finding community in books

a close reading of the textphoto © 2009 kevin rawlings | more info (via: Wylio)Growing up socially-challenged, books were my best friends. Every spare moment in my day I filled with reading material.

I worked my way alphabetically through the children’s section of my hometown library, checking out stacks of picture books, then early readers before careful selections from spiral racks of tween books. (I eventually adventured into the fiction section to find discover Margaret Atwood and DH Lawrence.)

Yes, I started with Muppet Babies, Fraggle Rock and Amelia Bedelia, before graduating to pictureless Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys, which gave way to Sweet Valley High. Long before Harry Potter and the Twilight series launched tween crazy for all things that go bump in the night, I devoured L. J. Smith’s witchy high school trilogy The Secret Circle; the dog-eared copies are still a treasured part of my book collection.

I’ve never had much interest in dissecting literature for important themes or reflections on the culture of the day. It would damage my relationship with the characters. Though I’d gladly tear apart a TV series to get at hidden meaning — Buffy the Vampire Slayer‘s metaphorical examination of adolescence, anyone? — to do so with well drawn characters in books seems too cynical. I hate to look at the people between the pages as careful constructs.

After all, I solved mysteries with Nancy Drew and her cohorts. Imagined conversations with fictitious personalities helped me work through pubescent angst.  And characters living out scenarios and environs otherwise outside my scope of experience  pushed my mind beyond upper middle class New Jersey suburbia.

A soon-to-be-published study in Psychological Science found readers are drawn into the fictional communities of the books they read. Psychologists focused on the paranormal sub-genre using publishing sensations Harry Potter and Twilight. Even in the case of otherwordly, unrealistic plotlines, subjects self-identified with aspects of the characters lives.

It may help explain a University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine study reporting that adolescents with heavy reading habits are “one-tenth as likely to be depressed” as teens reading the least. Even when you feel alone in the world, you know you have  friend in your favorite characters and a tribe in other fans.

Who were your fictional friends growing up?

 

Waning empathy and the explosion in reality programming

Snooki at Seaside Heights NJphoto © 2010 Aaron | more info (via: Wylio)University of Michigan researchers are set to release a study  reporting a sharp decline in empathy over the last decade, with the trait steadily sputtering out over the past 3 decades.  As reported in a recent Scientific American article, “almost 75 percent of students today rate themselves as less empathic than the average student 30 years ago.”

Journalist Jamil Zaki suggests that a decline in fiction reading may be a contributing factor to this downward shift in sensitivity:

The types of information we consume have also shifted in recent decades; specifically, Americans have abandoned reading in droves. The number of adults who read literature for pleasure sank below 50 percent for the first time ever in the past 10 years, with the decrease occurring most sharply among college-age adults. And reading may be linked to empathy. In a study published earlier this year psychologist Raymond A. Mar of York University in Toronto and others demonstrated that the number of stories preschoolers read predicts their ability to understand the emotions of others. Mar has also shown that adults who read less fiction report themselves to be less empathic.

Instead, might we consider the number of hours young adults spend in front of television screens? In late 2009, the average American watched 4 hours and 49 minutes of programming each day, which is 20 percent more viewing than the decade prior. Earlier this year, the Kaiser Family Foundation reported that children, ages 8-18 years old, average 7 hours and 38 minutes of entertainment consumption each day, including 4 hours and 29 minutes of television.

Aligned with the recent plunge in empathy is the explosion of reality programming in the past decade. In 2010 alone, American Idol, Dancing with the Stars and Survivor: Heroes and Villains took 5 of the top 10 slots for prime time ratings; just 3 scripted shows made the list. From American Idol and The Biggest Loser to the Jersey Shore and Hell’s Kitchen, the revamped reality genre  captivates audiences with its harsh treatment and criticisms of contestants. Creative editing makes enemies and underdogs of participants. Friendly, innocuous reality shows like Trading Spaces and What Not to Wear don’t stand a chance against the often brutal depictions and set-ups taking place on network television.

The Snookies and Situations of the world are overdrawn caricatures of real people left behind on the cutting room floor. The Jillian Michaels-esque coaches and insult-handy judges earn their livings punishing those caricatures for an hour each week on screen in your living room. The predominant characters aren’t there as relatable reflections of our lives; they are objects for our entertainment. They are the gladiators in the collosseum headed toward mass graves as their winning streaks come to an end.

With literature, people experience the richness of characters whose lives are very different from our own. From the beginning to the end of a great book, you can put yourself in that time or place and share in the struggles and successes of protagonists meant to draw you in and connect with your innermost insecurities, dreams and emotions. It’s a multi-dimensional slice of life across a variety of classes, races and cultures that allow you to see how seemingly unsimilar people’s lives aren’t so different after all.

Instead of PBS and the umpteenth BBC adaptation of yet another Jane Austen novel, Americans are choosing to watch  fundamentally fake, carefully constructed, over-the-top behavior on reality programming, week-after-week, inspiring applications from those who seek entrenched Kardashian-level celebrity or the repeat of an Elizabeth Hasselbeck career transition. Can reality programming also explain  the increase in college student narcissism that coincides with the decline in empathy?

If reality television is but a fickle trend, like our shift from zombies to vampires, we can impatiently wait for its replacement and hope better stories are on the way. But if it’s here to stay, we need to find the conditioning anecdote to remedy the disconnect experienced.

How do you view participants of reality programming that you watch? Do they feel like relatable three-dimensional people to you? Or do you recognize them as media constructs in place to entertain you?

QOD: B.F. Skinner on learning

staircase

photo by extranoise

“Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten.”

“We shouldn’t teach great books; we should teach a love of reading.”

B. F. Skinner, 1904-1990, psychologist

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Buying books

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A 2005 study in the UK found that 1 in 3 individuals made a book purchasing decision based on looking smart.

It finds one in every eight young people confessing to choosing a book ‘simply to be seen with the latest shortlisted title’. This herd instinct dwindles to affect only one in 20 over-50 year-olds.

Just over 40% relied on recommendations from friends and family.

In the short term, publishers don’t care why people buy books, just that the titles are moving. But in the long term, what does it say about society that 33% of consumers are just trying to keep up appearances?

PS. For loads of great publishing industry statistics, check out the running list kept by Para Publishing

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Losing patience with bad reads

I used to be able to read just about anything. . .lately, I’ve gotten way pickier. Reading for the sake of reading used to be enough. Whether classic fiction or a business book or general fiction, I wanted to be a sponge and absorb it all. . . content. . .writing styles.

In the past few months, I’ve lost patience with books that don’t instantly draw me in. Do I really owe it to an author to muddle through 50 or 100 pages before I’m committed to the storyline? I never read the Harry Potter series because I just didn’t get instantly swept away. (Friends told me I had to make it about 100-150 pages into the first book to be sold. . . and I just couldn’t be bothered.)

Then I realized. . .I’m getting older. The very sage “they” say people’s music tastes are pretty solidly cemented by one’s early 20s. I’m now likely to be a lifetime Bon Jovi and Goo Goo Dolls fan unless they really screw up, and the odds are against me for ever liking hip hop — didn’t like it 5 years ago, don’t like it today, with 99% certainty won’t like it 5 years from now.

Likewise there’s a settling point for ideology. We eventually reach a turning point where we aren’t actively seeking out new ideas; instead we seek out information and media that confirms our belief systems.

Perhaps thats why I can’t read “everything” anymore. . . I can’t be bothered with loose storytelling or stuffy writing styles. After 20+ years of reading I know what I like. . .and can pretty quickly tell the wheat from the chaff as far as my tastes are concerned. So I’m no longer going to think that my love of reading is dwindling; rather I’m going to appreciate that I know what I like. I’m still going to seek out new an different ideas, but I’m not going to feel guilty if they just don’t stick.