Wednesday, April 09, 2014

Endangered species …

… American Library — The Morning News. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

I heard some politician say recently that closing libraries is no big deal, since the kids now have the Internet to do their reading and schoolwork. It’s not the same thing. As any teacher who recalls the time when students still went to libraries and read books could tell him, study and reflection come more naturally to someone bent over a book. Seeing others, too, absorbed in their reading, holding up or pressing down on different-looking books, some intimidating in their appearance, others inviting, makes one a participant in one of the oldest and most noble human activities. Yes, reading books is a slow, time-consuming, and often tedious process. In comparison, surfing the Internet is a quick, distracting activity in which one searches for a specific subject, finds it, and then reads about it—often by skipping a great deal of material and absorbing only pertinent fragments. Books require patience, sustained attention to what is on the page, and frequent rest periods for reverie, so that the meaning of what we are reading settles in and makes its full impact.

2 comments:

  1. Libraries are refuges too for many people, especially children. Jeanette Winterson describes this aspect of their use well.

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  2. Long live libraries, heavenly repository of paper-and-ink books, journals, and magazines. May they never perish from the face of the earth.

    BTW, if a politician wants to close libraries, perhaps we are not too many steps away from book burning and other devilish obscenities.

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