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Myopic

David Brooks – who is often wrong but almost always readable – writes in today’s Herald Tribune: ‘A citizen of the Internet has a very different experience. The Internet smashes hierarchy and is not marked by deference. Maybe it would be different if it had been invented in Victorian England, but Internet culture is set in contemporary America. Internet culture is egalitarian. The young are more accomplished than the old. The new media is supposedly savvier than the old media. The dominant activity is free-wheeling, disrespectful, antiauthority disputation.
These different cultures foster different types of learning. The great essayist Joseph Epstein once distinguished between being well informed, being hip and being cultivated. The Internet helps you become well informed — knowledgeable about current events, the latest controversies and important trends. The Internet also helps you become hip — to learn about what’s going on, as Epstein writes, “in those lively waters outside the boring mainstream.” But the literary world is still better at helping you become cultivated, mastering significant things of lasting import. To learn these sorts of things, you have to defer to greater minds than your own. You have to take the time to immerse yourself in a great writer’s world. You have to respect the authority of the teacher.
Right now, the literary world is better at encouraging this kind of identity. The Internet culture may produce better conversationalists, but the literary culture still produces better students.’

An old-fashioned defense of literature: read because books will make you better a student.

But then again those who argue that literature should only strive for eternal beauty and that books should only be read for the sake of literature itself are equally myopic.


7 comments Last_comment
Every flirtation with eternity is suspicious.
An interesting quote from the website of the International Myopia Prevention Association in this context:

'If we did not learn to read, we would not become nearsighted.'
Is literature for learning? Well Nussbaum would agree that literature has philosophical meaning.
Bad student
A good book about this subject: George Steiner, ‘Lessons of the masters’.
http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/steinerg/lessons.htm#basic
(I am finally reading Totem and Taboo, by Freud – recommended indeed, thank you master Arnon)
What is Brooks' point saying Internet being some sort of American affair anyway? Wasn't the Internet invented at CERN (Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléair), a byproduct.
Bernard
Thanks for the link (funny, read totem and taboe as well, interesting, about superstition i can remember....well, have unfortunately a bad memory, due to drinking too much wine)
Arnon Grunberg
Those who see literature as a mere study tool and those who defend beauty for beauty's sake are equally myopic. I agree. But what would say is the most important aim of literature? Distraction? Moral development? Living the good life?