Twilight of the books?
2007-12-28 10:19 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
From this
post by technoshaman comes a link to a New Yorker article titled "Twilight of the Books" that asks "What will life be like if people
stop reading?"
Like technoshaman and unlike Caleb Crain, the article's
author, I'm rather more optimistic. I think that, with the rise of the
web, we're well on our way out of the decline of literacy caused by
television. Of course Crain's measure of literacy, reading "a work of
creative literature", may well continue to decline. I know I don't read
nearly as many novels as I once did. But I think nothing of devouring a
100-page legal document over on Groklaw -- it doesn't look nearly that big when it's all in one big,
scrollable, HTML page. And my kids happily spend their bookstore gift
cards on rollplaying game books. And read them.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-29 08:58 am (UTC)The best way to get your kids to read is to read to them daily. Read to them after they can read for themselves and have them read aloud to you. The other key to raising literate children is to limit TV while they are in school. We had a strictly enforced rule that there was no TV on school nights at our house. Homework got done, there were lots of conversations between parent and child and whoever was floating through the house. The best side-effect of limiting my child's access to television during her childhood was that she wasn't as influenced by popular media as most kids her age were and that has turned out to be a good thing in so many ways. Too many parents use the TV as a babysitter. My daughter and son-in-law read for pleasure the same way Patrick and I do, and a good third of the boxes in our garage awaiting transport to their home in New Zealand are full of books.