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Who Reads in America?

By Mark Schurmann, Pacific News Service. Posted January 19, 2006.


Though many educators bemoan the decline of literacy in America, you can still find plenty of readers in the smaller corners and cracks of society.
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Two years ago, while sitting in a café in Brooklyn on a cold winter night, I ran into "Chicago Mike." In the crook of his arm he held a thick and tattered book. I asked him what he was reading and he told me it was the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, by Edward Gibbon. I asked him if it was the abridged edition.

"No, it's one volume of the un-abridged text. Who needs to read the edited version?"

After ordering a cup of coffee, and with a smile on his face, he got on his bike and rode off into the snow. Mike delivered weed for a living.

The other day I read in a local paper that the department of education had released a report describing the eroding literacy skills of college students in America. One wonders if this is a bellwether for the country as a whole. What does it mean when high-achieving college students are reading less proficiently than their counterparts a generation ago? Are we slowly becoming a nation of non-readers?

This isn't the first time I've seen a red flag raised. Ten years ago Lewis Lapham heralded the death of literature in a published letter to his nephew (himself an aspiring writer) in Harper's magazine. I wondered then, as I do now: Could this be true?

I've always found literacy and literature outside the mainstream and in the private corners and cracks of society. Below Manhattan, in the city's subway system you can find more readers of classical and contemporary literature than you can in all the city's libraries. I wonder how the report might have come out had NYC subway riders been tested?

I once helped run writing workshops in the maximum security units (cell blocks) in Juvenile Halls in San Jose, San Francisco and Oakland. Young inmates, considered the worst offenders in the Juvenile system, found themselves confined to a small cell for the majority of the day. In many of the units even paper and pencil were considered contraband. Though desperate to get out and resume their lives, many of the kids confessed that before doing time they had never finished a book.

Among the titles I was asked to bring in by kids in the program were The Autobiography of Malcolm X, Down These Mean Streets by Piri Thomas and, on one occasion, Oscar Wilde's De Profundis.

Rob Tell was an old roommate. A college dropout, he worked a variety of jobs to earn a living -- bike messenger, shuttle driver, spot carpenter. Some years, Rob would follow the harvest trails. He spent his late summers in Maine raking blueberries, early fall in Massachusetts picking cranberries and he harvested beets in Minnesota in February. In a bar or at home, Rob could recite verse from Dylan Thomas or William Blake or a sonnet by Shakespeare, and always at an appropriate moment, either to break up a fight or during a toast.


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Schurmann, an avid reader, works for New America Media, a collaboration of ethnic media in the United States.

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Good point! Very similar to 451F .
Posted by: mazur on Jan 19, 2006 12:37 AM   
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I wonder lately how could one make such people more aware of each other, of their numbers... there are really a lot of them!

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Evolving Literature
Posted by: decembrist on Jan 19, 2006 1:34 AM   
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People read Stephen King. People read Dan Brown- just look at the Amazon sales ratings. "People" meaning almost everyone, "almost everyone" meaning you can't put a label on them... as long as you're not passionate about literature, that is.

I went to college in Utah, grew up in Utah, and never, besides the friends I had already gravitated to, found anyone who had read "Crime and Punishment." It's funny that Schurmann mentions Dostoevsky, becsause he was the hero of our tiny group. And believe it or not, Utah is a cultured place, where LDS children learn classics on the piano and on string instruments. Literature, however, is much too dangerous a place for young minds to tread too deeply.

I enthusiastically applaud Schurmann's piece, because I believe he is right - it is "society's outcasts who will continue to treasure and reproduce literature." This is generally true now and always has been. I would only add one thing - it is society's outcasts that spin new webs (rather than reproduce) from old or contemporary literature.

Literature and poetry critics have cried out the death of literature many times in the last few decades. I believe most are wrong for the reason that Schurmann insinuates - the critics themselves are looking at society as a whole and not those "in the subway" devouring classic as well as modern literature. They're not looking at those that actually (and always have) perpetuated literature as a constantly evolving art. Will Dan Brown be remembered 100 years from now? I doubt it, but Dostoevsky has been read for over 100 years. This, I believe, is because Dostoevsky took controversial ways of looking at the world and dramatized them in utterly new ways. Dan Brown, well, he wrote a book for the bestseller's list, using conventional methods - nothing new there but his subject. Not that there's anything wrong with that. heehee. But there is a difference.

Look at Henry Miller and the obscenity trials he and his books endured. Miller will always be remembered for the inspiration he gave to a new generation of writers.

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Education is key
Posted by: helen_0f_romford on Jan 19, 2006 1:47 AM   
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I don't know about the education system in the USA, but here in the UK it seems designed around making literature an intimidating and examinable experience. The idea that books can be read for pleasure remains an alien concept to British educators.

If instead they addressed the idea of reading for fun and then progressed to deeper understandings, then they might get somewhere. However pending that unlikely day, serious literature will remain the backwater pursuit of the isolated outsider.

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» RE: ducation is key Posted by: tcx2
What's to read?
Posted by: Meremark on Jan 19, 2006 3:47 AM   
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Here in Powell's Bookstore's Portland, a precocious progressives' blog was all #+?*! snippy and [epithet deleted] snark to each other when everyone hooked up, and heaped o' slander for any thread thoughts running beyond a one-liner.

That was then. Now they all write like young ladies and gentlemen, with clucking disopprobrium of drop-by ditzies. The internet makes readers write readers. Literacy is in slow and guarded recovery; there's lots of TV to wear off.

Another aspect of unread scholarship considers the angle of censored books. These three titles available free for the printing out, were each and long censored or sabotaged in circulation by the CIA knowledge directors.

THE SECRET TEAM - The CIA and Its Allies in Control of the United States and the World
by L. FLETCHER PROUTY,Col., U.S. Air Force (Ret.)

Secrets of the Federal Reserve - The history, organization and controlling interests behind the Federal Reserve
by Eustace Mullins

George Bush:-The Unauthorized Biography
by Webster G. Tarpley & Anton Chaitkin


And the latest book I know of with a distribution being actively CIA-stomped, makes the case with conviction for Cheney's planning and commission of 3000 mass murders of 9/11. No rebuttal of any detail has come forth. At the author's website:

CROSSING THE RUBICON: The Decline of the American Empire at the End of the Age of Oil
by Michael C. Ruppert

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Hats off to Peter Jackson...
Posted by: adp3d on Jan 19, 2006 4:00 AM   
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...for reviving interest in Tolkien, at least its a start. Do not forget the amazing popularity of Harry Potter. Take heart in realizing that at least some of these kids will go on to read other classics, that might not have otherwise.

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Spelling (is) for dummies
Posted by: Spot on Jan 19, 2006 4:57 AM   
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with the internet age, the written language has been taken out of the hands of the dictionary-writers. It might be possible that never before in the history of humankind have the children been SO literate(in the sense of being able to read and write). today's children aren't illiterate; they use written language as an adaptive form of expression that does not conform to the literary elite's (sorry if that sounds like a conspiracy) spelling manuals.
Kinda tangent to the topic, I know.
As far as not understanding literature is concerned however, you're spot on there. but what do you expect when we teach kids the answers instead of the methods used to find them?

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otto
Posted by: otto on Jan 19, 2006 5:11 AM   
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lThere are also the exceptional cases like Jens Soering in a Virginia Pen for life; I just became aware of him through a book he wrote on Prayer, "The Prayer of the Prisoner". He was probably wrongly given two life sentences for murder at age 18 before he went through a conversion. He has now written three books in his 29 years in prison, and gets in trouble for speaking out about the system. One book is "An Expensive Way To Make Bad Peple Worse". He is a German citizen and would love to be sent to Germany to serve his time, where there's also possibility of parole.

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Subway serendipity
Posted by: brunowe on Jan 19, 2006 8:37 AM   
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I often see some challenging reading choices on the NYC subway. Back in '93, I was reading Aristotle's Ethics (and i'm long overdue for a reread), and heard a voice from the person sitting near me saying "eudamonia". This is a term from the work. He had read it and then the woman next to him mentioned that she had as well (she used to teach classics). We discussed related topics for a bit before I had to get off. That totally made my day.

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Oscar Wilde
Posted by: LRayn on Jan 19, 2006 9:33 AM   
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Oscar Wilde was in jail simply for the "crime" of being gay.

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why just literature
Posted by: iremember on Jan 19, 2006 9:35 AM   
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Why the focus on literature? I think one of the primary reasons our politics and our country are so fucked up is that no one seems to read history in this country. Would the Iraq war have happened if everyone knew that the only WMD they may have were sold to them by us? Would we allow torture to be committed in our name if everyone knew of our crimes in Central America during the 80's? Would the people allow the culture of evil to continue if they knew the history of CIA involvement in the drug trade? Sometimes I think there is no history in this country except in books and the minds of those who read them. In the mainstream media, most of our history except for a barely factual sanitized version has already disappeared down the memory hole.

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» RE: why just literature Posted by: EncinoM
Fahrenheit 451--coming to a culture near you soon!
Posted by: zooeyhall on Jan 19, 2006 9:36 AM   
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In the end, it is not how much money you made in your life or how many posessions you acquired. Instead it is how much you learned about the world and the universe.

As to the decline of reading---I am reminded of a line in Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451. In the book, an old man tells Montag (the fireman) that "the public that largely gave up reading on its own accord" and that it was only after that the book burning began.

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next time, I'll ask
Posted by: nedwylie on Jan 19, 2006 11:01 AM   
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I see a lot of homeless guys in libraries. Typically they have to at least pretend to read or get kicked out. One old fellow seems to find something different every time I see him. Next time maybe I'll ask him about it.

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A new kind of literacy
Posted by: tanstaafl28 on Jan 19, 2006 12:30 PM   
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I think that kids today have grown up with a much more visual media than even I did back in the 1970's. This doesn't mean they aren't literate, they are just literate in a different way. Education isn't geared to this kind of thinking. Sheer numbers keep them running the old "Factory Assembly Line" model.

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Language is a virus...
Posted by: Dig That Jive on Jan 19, 2006 1:28 PM   
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Had it not been for the armrests on my chair, I would have fallen off of it. This piece couldn't have come at a better time, for me, personally. I recently had a person ask me why most of my friends were "a bunch of losers," why I didn't associate with people at my "level" (college degree, stable career, etc.) I had never thought of it that way, I always saw my friends as interesting, intelligent people who share the same outlook on life, love, and human emotion as I do. I could see how they would be considered "losers," no college degree, odd jobs, unstable relationships... etc. etc. However, its these friends of mine that have the most insightful ways of thinking and it's because they've found that they've been infected with the need to read, understand, explore through the words of people like them, people who can turn things on their heads with a few simple statements even if they were junkies, alcoholics, penniless "losers." I'm sending this article to all my "loser" friends.

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Education all the way
Posted by: maxpayne on Jan 19, 2006 1:51 PM   
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Can you imagine how many of these brownshirts out here in red-state/area America would even barely exist if they were educated? Sigh ...

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Reading is bad for your net worth
Posted by: medstudgeek on Jan 19, 2006 2:00 PM   
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It's pretty simple, actually. Nobody reads, so reading puts you out of step with society. The more you do things that are less conventional, the less people will like you and the more trouble you will have earning a living. Hence the only people who will read regularly are those who believe something is important to risk damaging your employability, who are few and far between.

In France, where literature is considered part of general culture (i.e. normal people would discuss that instead of the stock market), I understand the situation is different over there.

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No time for books
Posted by: picaresque on Jan 19, 2006 3:02 PM   
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Reading a book (especially a serious book, whether fiction or non-fiction) takes time and energy that a lot of people don't believe that they have. Most readers read either for entertainment or for some tangible benefit (that's why self-help books are often at the top of the bestseller list). But literature is not always entertaining, and the benefits are not always so tangible. Moby Dick won't teach you the Habits of Highly Effective People or the benefits of a low-carb lifestyle. And, amazing as it may be, it's undeniably a tough slog. So, like most of the arts, serious books are of interest only to a small minority. As my mom once said when I asked her why she liked Danielle Steele's novels so much, "I'm tired when I get home from work, so I want to read something that doesn't take much effort." As for the much vaunted death of the novel, I'll paraphrase the late, great Donald Barthelme:

Q: What will replace it?
A: I should think it would be something very similar.
Q: Is the bicycle dead?

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logos
Posted by: logos on Jan 19, 2006 3:25 PM   
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Start by finding the ad agency responsible for the grammatical goof in the VW ad at top of page.

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logos
Posted by: logos on Jan 19, 2006 3:28 PM   
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Start by finding the ad agency responsible for the grammatical goof in the VW ad at top of page.

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» RE: logos Posted by: MEL810
The Death of the Intellect in the U.S.
Posted by: ericn613 on Jan 20, 2006 11:31 AM   
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Hear hear to those who point out Peter Jackson reviving interest in Tolkein and Harry Potter for getting preteens into the habit and loving every minute of it. Whenever I hear someone bemoaning the Harry Potter franchise, I always have to ask "why?" These are the types of stories that first hooked me into reading so very many years ago.

Having said that, the article pointed out the reading that goes on in the subway. During a recent trip to Berlin, I couldn't help but notice that every U-Bahn traincar was full of people reading, far more than I could ever have imagined in NYC. And to top it all off, one doesn't see just German books, but plenty of English books along with the occasional other language.

My point isn't to try to say that Europeans are "better" than us or anything of that sort, but that we no longer embrace intellectualism in the United States. We now live in a culture where it is unpopular to learn more about a topic than a soundbyte or headline. We are hoodwinked into believing that anyone who dares to read is an uppity, snobby liberal. (Unless, of course, you're reading Dutch or Michael Savage.) It is as if the sole act of having one's nose buried in a large volume is "showing off" to those in the vicinity.

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Little corners of lovers of literature
Posted by: bookwoman on Jan 21, 2006 7:07 AM   
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A couple of years ago, faced with my life being completely changed by widowhood, I went to the local community college and enrolled in a couple of classes. I hold three college degrees, but I began taking the classes that I had never had a chance to take earlier in my life. One of these turned out to be an 8:00 am class in Early English Literature. It wasn't jammed, but there were about twenty five students in the class, and unusual for community college, I was by far the oldest. The others were traditional students. There are many literature classes offered at this school and most of them are offered at much easier hours. However, attendance at the class was excellent, participation was excellent and these kids were obviously very interested in what we were reading. The professor loves his subject and is great at communicating it so that helped. However, as I mentioned to him, I was so happy to see that "the younger generation" still had a group in it who would attack "Beowulf", the Canterbury Tales" and Shakespeare with such gusto when they had a choice of other classes. I think the people who used to read still read and I believe, paraphrasing Churchill "the rumors of the demise of reading and love of literature is grossly exaggerated".

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