Where Read?

David Clemens

  • Article
  • October 19, 2009

In his passionate book, University of Virginia English Professor Mark Edmundson asks Why Read? and provides a compelling answer. But we should also ask: where read? I have been traveling a lot, and I see people reading in just two places:  airplanes and subways (something about metal tubes and forced waiting encourages literacy).  On the other hand, I rarely see students reading in the classroom or the library (too busy checking Facebook, texting, tweeting, or watching ESPN or “pr0n”). Last week in Denver for a conference I visited The Tattered Cover Bookstore.  It was snowing outside but inside were glowing incandescent lights, the smell of ink and paper, old leather chairs, old lamps, old wooden desks, wood bookcases and floor, all showing the patina of human use. Conversely, a few months back, I was in Seattle and visited the Rem Koolhaas-designed Seattle Public Library, a monument to the alienated intimacy of urban life where, as Sarah Goldhagen says, “people are never really alone, but neither are they ever really together.”  We view each other through windows and screens.  The library’s interior is cool, sterile, artificial, replicated, technological.  The architect disorients patrons with oppressive volumes of space, imponderables of scale, and uncertain horizons.  A book seems out of place, intrusive, soiling the metal and plastic.  This place is about INFORMATION, not Imagination. The Tattered Cover promotes reading where the postmodern library discourages it.  If we want to recuperate literacy, we need to give students settings with manifold pleasures for their senses (computer labs need not apply).

  • Share

Most Commented

March 24, 2025

1.

A Reckoning for Higher Education?

Are American colleges and universities finally getting their comeuppance?...

March 31, 2025

2.

Keeping Watch

Columbia's descent into chaos is by its own hand. Actions to right the university must be swift and tough....

January 27, 2025

3.

Exclusive Documents: UC-Boulder Breaks Civil Rights Law to Advance Racial Preferences

New FOIA documents grant a window into how the University of Colorado-Boulder, in the name of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, discriminates on the basis of protected class and upholds a co......

Most Read

May 15, 2015

1.

Where Did We Get the Idea That Only White People Can Be Racist?

A look at the double standard that has arisen regarding racism, illustrated recently by the reaction to a black professor's biased comments on Twitter....

April 15, 2025

2.

Fighting Harvard and the Other Cultural Warlords

The academic bureaucracies and professoriate are so deeply committed to their radical program of replacing American society with their own vision of a new order that we have no real choice b......

October 12, 2010

3.

Ask a Scholar: What is the True Definition of Latino?

What does it mean to be Latino? Are only Latin American people Latino, or does the term apply to anyone whose language derived from Latin?...