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Brent Daniel Schei/Hagen's avatar

An excellent piece, Sam, and one after my own heart if I may be so bold, though I lack the experiences or knowledge in its unique amalgamation that allowed you to write it from your own unique perspective. It has brought up a number of thread-thoughts in my mind, thoughts that I've long had floating around as yet unwoven into any particularly recognizable pattern.

One is that we are like little children who, having only recently learned to read, have tired of it as a pastime and gotten distracted by newer, fresher diversions; we may yet be drawn back to it once these newer diversions in turn become worn out and tiresome.

Another thought is that when an art form reaches a kind of critical mass or reaches a saturation point, it moves past a point of relatability to the masses. For example, the pop musiciain who strives to create "real art" and ceases to be popular; this may be a failing of both the artist and the audience to varying degrees. Having studied music composition in my university days, I often felt that many of my colleagues were far more enamoured with the clever processes by which they could create music (using algorithms, 12-tone matrices, aeleatoric devices, etc.) than using those tools to communicate something to their audiences. Then again, it is important, in my opinion, to push past conventional ways of communicating thoughts and ideas in search of the new and the as yet undiscovered.

Of course, the way things stand in the modern world vis-a-vis technology and mass consumption, there are numerous obstacles to pushing through new innovations in art or human understanding. We seem to be increasingly stuck engaging with the same content and editorializing and analyzing said content over and over and over ... I guess what I'm saying is we're constipated--the human race is a constipated child experiencing ever increasing discomfort. Does any of this make sense? Or is it all just a bunch of nonsense?

That's another thought. What does all this reading amount to? Is it something akin to the inability to reconcile quantum and classical phyics? That there is something to be gained and utilized from all that gathered knowledge, but the trick is figuring out how it transfers from one realm into another? Even if the process of doing so seems like little more than magic?

Yes, a thought-provoking piece, Sam. I was provoked and this is the result. I hope you're happy!

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Jenny F.'s avatar

Why read? I had a dream I was in a bookstore, on the top floor of a dying mall, and I was looking at the children’s books with my husband. Where are the. children, asked the proprietor; there used to be so many children. It was a silent, empty store. It was a silent, empty mall. I decided to have another baby. And I wonder about my babies’ futures, both under 5, as the material culture of US childhood seems to be emptied out, smoothed over, paved with concrete; the childhood that was invented for us by the Victorians… even the McDonalds have lost their playplaces.

In college I read The Little White Bird, and wrote a truly terrible “honors" thesis on Peter Pan… my advisor, a Franciscan brother, said it reminded him of a medieval romance - conjointure - where attachments spin out and return to each other, which I think was a kind way to say it was disorganized. I understand now was a way to reach my own dead brother, dead like Barrie’s brother but ageless now. I saw what was happening to the humanities and turned away from the advised English PhD; I now work as a human subjects research bureaucrat; in my mid-30s I wonder how to recover the things I loved and lost, and how to give them to my children. “My little white bird a book, hers a baby.” Without them, we perish as a people.

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