There's only one thing about this literature that disturbs me
Tom Send a noteboard - 05/06/2011 05:39:35 PM
Perhaps the article is painting too bleak a picture, but it seems that the books are uniformly miserable with bad endings and few, if any, redeeming characters. While I do not advocate censorship, either of language or of content, of books, the simple fact remains that early teens in particular tend to view the world as it is presented in these sorts of books. While there certainly are meth users, alcoholics, homophobes, rapists, self-mutilators and the like, that is not an accurate depiction of society as a whole or where we want society to be.
It's perhaps a natural consequence of the collapse of religion that people seek escapes from the world rather than try to impose a dogma that would regulate and mitigate the horrors of which humans are capable. These escapes can be drugs, alcohol, self-mutilation, reading escapist books, joining the Society for the Creative Anachronism or becoming a hard core Trekkie. However, ultimately all of these behaviors are self-defeating in that they do not directly address the problems of society. It is as though an entire generation is giving up on trying to fix things. I would like to think I'm reading too much into the book choices of pre-teens and early teens, but the sad fact is that this assessment is reinforced by every interaction that I've had with that generation.
It is clear that traditional religion has failed - the fundamentalist wave that has swept the US will ultimately die out because believing in Jesus is too simplistic and implausible, even in a world that recognizes the possibility of the divine and of miracles. One can follow Jesus as a moral teacher. One could even say he was divinely inspired. However, fewer and fewer people can accept at face value the fantastic and unsubstantiated claims made in books written 2500, 2000 or even 1500 years ago. Islamism is driven by the same despair over the relentless encroachment of secularism that has driven people into the arms of the fundies in the US. Revealed religion is a dead letter.
The question, then, is what we can do as a society to help people feel better about themselves and the human condition. Is there any solace to be had? It is clear that young adult literature is as "dark" as it is because of a profound despair in society. I would hope that at some point a new approach to spirituality takes hold, one that emphasizes being open-minded as opposed to being dogmatic, but which recognizes that certain behaviors are uniformly bad and seeks to act as a balance to the absolute and complete destruction of any sense of right and wrong that is increasing in society.
It's perhaps a natural consequence of the collapse of religion that people seek escapes from the world rather than try to impose a dogma that would regulate and mitigate the horrors of which humans are capable. These escapes can be drugs, alcohol, self-mutilation, reading escapist books, joining the Society for the Creative Anachronism or becoming a hard core Trekkie. However, ultimately all of these behaviors are self-defeating in that they do not directly address the problems of society. It is as though an entire generation is giving up on trying to fix things. I would like to think I'm reading too much into the book choices of pre-teens and early teens, but the sad fact is that this assessment is reinforced by every interaction that I've had with that generation.
It is clear that traditional religion has failed - the fundamentalist wave that has swept the US will ultimately die out because believing in Jesus is too simplistic and implausible, even in a world that recognizes the possibility of the divine and of miracles. One can follow Jesus as a moral teacher. One could even say he was divinely inspired. However, fewer and fewer people can accept at face value the fantastic and unsubstantiated claims made in books written 2500, 2000 or even 1500 years ago. Islamism is driven by the same despair over the relentless encroachment of secularism that has driven people into the arms of the fundies in the US. Revealed religion is a dead letter.
The question, then, is what we can do as a society to help people feel better about themselves and the human condition. Is there any solace to be had? It is clear that young adult literature is as "dark" as it is because of a profound despair in society. I would hope that at some point a new approach to spirituality takes hold, one that emphasizes being open-minded as opposed to being dogmatic, but which recognizes that certain behaviors are uniformly bad and seeks to act as a balance to the absolute and complete destruction of any sense of right and wrong that is increasing in society.
Political correctness is the pettiest form of casuistry.
ἡ δὲ κἀκ τριῶν τρυπημάτων ἐργαζομένη ἐνεκάλει τῇ φύσει, δυσφορουμένη, ὅτι δὴ μὴ καὶ τοὺς τιτθοὺς αὐτῇ εὐρύτερον ἢ νῦν εἰσι τρυπώη, ὅπως καὶ ἄλλην ἐνταῦθα μίξιν ἐπιτεχνᾶσθαι δυνατὴ εἴη. – Procopius
Ummaka qinnassa nīk!
*MySmiley*
ἡ δὲ κἀκ τριῶν τρυπημάτων ἐργαζομένη ἐνεκάλει τῇ φύσει, δυσφορουμένη, ὅτι δὴ μὴ καὶ τοὺς τιτθοὺς αὐτῇ εὐρύτερον ἢ νῦν εἰσι τρυπώη, ὅπως καὶ ἄλλην ἐνταῦθα μίξιν ἐπιτεχνᾶσθαι δυνατὴ εἴη. – Procopius
Ummaka qinnassa nīk!
*MySmiley*
This WSJ article has kicked up a huge fuss on the internet - YA is "too dark".
05/06/2011 03:46:50 PM
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There's only one thing about this literature that disturbs me
05/06/2011 05:39:35 PM
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This is a thought out, finely articulated response.
05/06/2011 06:47:13 PM
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If it were just vampires that would be just fine
05/06/2011 08:03:02 PM
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People have been complaining about this since the novel was invented
05/06/2011 11:02:58 PM
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Apparently the article did paint far too bleak a picture,
06/06/2011 12:39:46 PM
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Why waste time with "YA literature" at all?
06/06/2011 02:14:03 PM
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Re: Why waste time with "YA literature" at all?
06/06/2011 02:28:42 PM
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I think that's a post factum justification, not a reason.
06/06/2011 05:08:09 PM
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Maybe. It's hard to separate, I think.
07/06/2011 01:06:29 PM
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One certainly has to choose the real literature to present, certainly.
07/06/2011 02:27:00 PM
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Very good post.
06/06/2011 08:52:22 PM
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You seem to be the only one who thinks so.
*NM*
07/06/2011 01:17:18 AM
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I don't think it's a bad post... I just think that the "despair" is a teen fad, and not as bad as
07/06/2011 03:19:03 AM
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Suicide rates have gone up significantly
07/06/2011 02:42:55 PM
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Heh.
08/06/2011 07:24:44 PM
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you are having trouble finding cultural ideas that turned bad?
08/06/2011 11:56:23 PM
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The classic problem of the overprotective parent- underestimating your kids
09/06/2011 05:33:54 AM
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the classic problem of people who have no idea what they are talking about
09/06/2011 04:16:25 PM
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Are you really equating reading about trauma with trauma? They are not the same. *NM*
09/06/2011 07:10:34 PM
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I'm sure the percentage of good books must be higher than they make it sound,
05/06/2011 05:53:21 PM
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I'd say books offer a fundamentally different experience than movies
05/06/2011 06:53:55 PM
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I'm not sure that makes a difference here.
06/06/2011 04:47:05 AM
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Because thinking makes you LESS susceptible to these things you're afraid of
06/06/2011 05:27:26 PM
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I don't completely agree with that.
06/06/2011 07:26:21 PM
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I feel like I just can't relate to parents determined to shelter their kids from everything
06/06/2011 10:21:44 PM
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To think the content described is acceptable, when they ban "Huck Finn" for using 'nigger'.
*NM*
05/06/2011 09:45:15 PM
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CNN: "On a website, a person named 'Macharius' used the 'N-word'".
06/06/2011 01:58:35 AM
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Parents have the right and resonsibility to know what their children are reading
06/06/2011 03:41:22 AM
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Re: Parents have the right and resonsibility to know what their children are reading
06/06/2011 12:40:24 PM
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I'd argue if you're old enough to be interested in the subject matter, you're old enough to read it
06/06/2011 05:32:33 PM
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Depends on the subject matter.
07/06/2011 01:07:57 PM
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Basically? Yes.
07/06/2011 06:42:04 PM
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why do think there is value in letting them read whatever they want?
07/06/2011 06:52:20 PM
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Don't be an idiot.
09/06/2011 05:25:26 AM
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Well, I wrote a long piece related to this
06/06/2011 05:21:06 AM
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Great post. She really tries to muddy the waters relating to censorship and parenting.
06/06/2011 08:05:21 AM
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She kind of conflates some issues that are quite different, if you ask me.
06/06/2011 08:47:33 PM
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Wait wait wait wait wait... NYT reviewed Game of Thrones? I must read this
07/06/2011 03:20:08 AM
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Having now read one of the books mentioned, Cheryl Rainfield's Scars...
08/06/2011 02:18:23 AM
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