Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
ANXIETY
ABOUT BOOKS
Do
I have to convince you that I like reading books?
I
hope not.
Every
day, I devote some time to serious reading. I read what has just been published
and what was published long ago, in order to maintain a sense of perspective
about newly-published books that are currently being praised or (in some cases)
over-praised. Hence the “Something New” and “Something Old” sections of this
blog. I cannot bring myself to think that someone who does not read frequently
and deeply is fully civilised. When I am in a new city, or even in the
out-of-the-way parts of my own city, I often have a habit of checking out
second-hand bookshops. My house is filled with books – far, far too many of
them probably – many of which I have yet to read. Catching up with things that
have sat unread on my shelves for years is another motive for cranking out
“Something Old” essays. On the floor of my study, with its crammed bookshelves,
sit piles of yet-to-be-read review copies of new books, through which I try to
work my way systematically.
So
I am no enemy of literacy or the joys of reading, okay?
But
recently, and especially on Facebook, I have noticed a worrying trend. There
are more and more incitements to read, written by people who are apparently
worried that the habit of reading itself is dying. This is never specifically
stated, but it is an implicit subtext. Some of these incitements are relatively
harmless posts on ways to get your children reading – an admirable objective,
although even here there is the assumption that in your household children
won’t be reading anyway. (So get off your
arses and read regularly to your young children, nitwits!) And coupled with
this, there is often another assumption that reading is, in and of itself, a virtue
rather than a pleasure, a pastime or a means of enlightenment. Let me make it
clear, bibliophile though I am, that I have never suffered the delusion that I
am morally superior to the woman who hardly ever reads a book but prefers
dressmaking or netball as pastimes. Being literate and informed and “fully
civilised” are not the same as being morally good.
Obviously
some of the posts about reading, which I am now seeing on Facebook, are
motivated by self-interest. A high proportion of them are put up by publishing
companies – usually marginal and “independent” ones – and by groups such as the
New Zealand Society of Authors (of which I am a member…. or perhaps once was a member. I might have let my
membership lapse). When it comes to reading, such groups and companies have
“skin in the game” as it were.
More
annoyingly, many of the literacy-propaganda postings have a hectoring tone. I
have now had my fill of posts with titles such as “100 Books You Must Read
Before You Die” or “Twenty Notoriously Underrated Writers You Should be Reading”.
Note those bullying verbs “must” and “should”. Who says I must or should read
any of these things? As I have been at pains to explain in this post, I am
already reading as widely and as much as I can. To feel a sense of obligation
to read everything recommended by such bloggers would be asking too much. To
quote the title of one of my earlier postings (which I am heavily cannibalising
in this one) You Can’t Read Everything.
Besides, I am fully capable of discovering underrated authors for myself,
without having to follow somebody else’s doubtless partial list. And I already
know that whatever list of the “underrated” or the “great” that somebody else
can produce, I can produce an alternative list of my own.
It
seems to me that underlying much of this nervous on-line anxiety to promote
books and reading, there is a looming awareness that novels and printed prose
in general are no longer the main forms of cultural communication. Dedicated
though I am to reading, devoted though I am to great and compendious novels, I
accept that those who choose to read, complete and unabridged, Ulysses or Moby Dick are a tiny proportion of the educated part of the
population, and an even tinier proportion of the total population. The same
goes – only more so – for the readers of modern poetry.
And
from here on it will always be so.
Drop
the anxiety, on-line posters. Accept that we are a minority compared with all
the television, Sky, Netflix, download and Youtube watchers, and be happy with
our minority status.
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