She kind of conflates some issues that are quite different, if you ask me.
Legolas Send a noteboard - 06/06/2011 08:47:33 PM
How else can one manage to complain both about the likes of Meyer and about overly realistic and bleak YA writers in the same article? Sure, both groups of books have violence and certain "dark" elements in them, but that's about where the similarity ends. I haven't really read any of Meyer's imitators and rivals, but I would imagine that most of them aren't too far removed from her syrupy, fairy-tale approach to romance and human relationships.
The other group, by whom I'm not sure I've read anything at all (so my comments may have to be taken with a few grains of salt), seems like they write books of rather more merit, books that aim to be realistic and a long way from fairy tales - albeit realistic with an exaggerated focus on the darker side of society.
One can criticize both genres, but it'd have to be for entirely different reasons. Tom made some interesting points in his reply about adolescents these days, who certainly are a bit nihilistic and cynical in some ways, and about how that shouldn't really be encouraged further by this kind of literature. And one can also argue that Meyer and her ilk encourage another trend that shouldn't be encouraged: the tendency to expect success and happiness to come falling into one's lap without any effort, the lack of ambition or even laziness. I suppose these two things aren't contradictory as such, but they're certainly entirely different problems.
And I get the impression that the reason for Gurdon's amalgam is simply ignorance of what she's writing about, the kind of ignorant prejudice that, say, makes some people reject all heavy metal (or rock music, back in the day) - or, perhaps more relevant on this site, genre literature. It's not quite on a level with that ridiculous review of Game of Thrones that somehow made it into the New York Times a few months ago, but it kind of seems to go in that direction.
As for whether adults should restrict what children read... parents should take an interest in what their children read, of course, and if the parents aren't really doing that, it's great if some teachers or others try to fill the void a bit. And in some cases, trying to keep a child from reading a book can be entirely justified, even if it brings that risk of making the forbidden fruit more attractive. I just wish people would be more intelligent and discerning in their censorship, and not try to ban books for such idiotic reasons, profane language top on the list, and sexual content not far behind. There are books with little to no profanity or explicit sexuality that are far worse to read for children or adolescents than other books that have loads of profanity and sex. For instance, Kundera's Unbearable Lightness of Being has quite a bit of sex, but I'd have no problem with young adolescents reading it - if they want to read it, and like what they read, then clearly they're ready for it, even if there will no doubt be many things that elude them on that first read. (I just realized that's essentially the same argument beetnemesis made in a post higher up - but I want to clarify that I only think the statement valid for certain books, and definitely not for others).
And then of course the next question is how a parent with limited time can make such a judgement about some recent book that he/she hasn't read. Warning labels can tell you "this book contains sex/violence/profanity", but they can't tell you if the book is an Unbearable Lightness or a Sexual Life of Catherine M (and damn, that book was awful), or whether it condemns violence or glorifies it. They're clearly far inferior to reading reviews or asking librarians/teachers' advice, but perhaps they serve some purpose for those parents who don't have time for or ready access to such advice, even if they inevitably throw out some good things along with the bad.
The other group, by whom I'm not sure I've read anything at all (so my comments may have to be taken with a few grains of salt), seems like they write books of rather more merit, books that aim to be realistic and a long way from fairy tales - albeit realistic with an exaggerated focus on the darker side of society.
One can criticize both genres, but it'd have to be for entirely different reasons. Tom made some interesting points in his reply about adolescents these days, who certainly are a bit nihilistic and cynical in some ways, and about how that shouldn't really be encouraged further by this kind of literature. And one can also argue that Meyer and her ilk encourage another trend that shouldn't be encouraged: the tendency to expect success and happiness to come falling into one's lap without any effort, the lack of ambition or even laziness. I suppose these two things aren't contradictory as such, but they're certainly entirely different problems.
And I get the impression that the reason for Gurdon's amalgam is simply ignorance of what she's writing about, the kind of ignorant prejudice that, say, makes some people reject all heavy metal (or rock music, back in the day) - or, perhaps more relevant on this site, genre literature. It's not quite on a level with that ridiculous review of Game of Thrones that somehow made it into the New York Times a few months ago, but it kind of seems to go in that direction.
As for whether adults should restrict what children read... parents should take an interest in what their children read, of course, and if the parents aren't really doing that, it's great if some teachers or others try to fill the void a bit. And in some cases, trying to keep a child from reading a book can be entirely justified, even if it brings that risk of making the forbidden fruit more attractive. I just wish people would be more intelligent and discerning in their censorship, and not try to ban books for such idiotic reasons, profane language top on the list, and sexual content not far behind. There are books with little to no profanity or explicit sexuality that are far worse to read for children or adolescents than other books that have loads of profanity and sex. For instance, Kundera's Unbearable Lightness of Being has quite a bit of sex, but I'd have no problem with young adolescents reading it - if they want to read it, and like what they read, then clearly they're ready for it, even if there will no doubt be many things that elude them on that first read. (I just realized that's essentially the same argument beetnemesis made in a post higher up - but I want to clarify that I only think the statement valid for certain books, and definitely not for others).
And then of course the next question is how a parent with limited time can make such a judgement about some recent book that he/she hasn't read. Warning labels can tell you "this book contains sex/violence/profanity", but they can't tell you if the book is an Unbearable Lightness or a Sexual Life of Catherine M (and damn, that book was awful), or whether it condemns violence or glorifies it. They're clearly far inferior to reading reviews or asking librarians/teachers' advice, but perhaps they serve some purpose for those parents who don't have time for or ready access to such advice, even if they inevitably throw out some good things along with the bad.
This message last edited by Legolas on 06/06/2011 at 10:29:08 PM
This WSJ article has kicked up a huge fuss on the internet - YA is "too dark".
05/06/2011 03:46:50 PM
- 2051 Views
There's only one thing about this literature that disturbs me
05/06/2011 05:39:35 PM
- 1004 Views
This is a thought out, finely articulated response.
05/06/2011 06:47:13 PM
- 1043 Views
If it were just vampires that would be just fine
05/06/2011 08:03:02 PM
- 824 Views
People have been complaining about this since the novel was invented
05/06/2011 11:02:58 PM
- 895 Views
Apparently the article did paint far too bleak a picture,
06/06/2011 12:39:46 PM
- 983 Views
Why waste time with "YA literature" at all?
06/06/2011 02:14:03 PM
- 760 Views
Re: Why waste time with "YA literature" at all?
06/06/2011 02:28:42 PM
- 719 Views
I think that's a post factum justification, not a reason.
06/06/2011 05:08:09 PM
- 908 Views
Maybe. It's hard to separate, I think.
07/06/2011 01:06:29 PM
- 948 Views
One certainly has to choose the real literature to present, certainly.
07/06/2011 02:27:00 PM
- 968 Views
Very good post.
06/06/2011 08:52:22 PM
- 780 Views
You seem to be the only one who thinks so.
*NM*
07/06/2011 01:17:18 AM
- 278 Views

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
- 1041 Views
Suicide rates have gone up significantly
07/06/2011 02:42:55 PM
- 716 Views
Heh.
08/06/2011 07:24:44 PM
- 1022 Views
you are having trouble finding cultural ideas that turned bad?
08/06/2011 11:56:23 PM
- 939 Views
The classic problem of the overprotective parent- underestimating your kids
09/06/2011 05:33:54 AM
- 877 Views
the classic problem of people who have no idea what they are talking about
09/06/2011 04:16:25 PM
- 827 Views
Are you really equating reading about trauma with trauma? They are not the same. *NM*
09/06/2011 07:10:34 PM
- 291 Views
I'm sure the percentage of good books must be higher than they make it sound,
05/06/2011 05:53:21 PM
- 1073 Views
I'd say books offer a fundamentally different experience than movies
05/06/2011 06:53:55 PM
- 998 Views
I'm not sure that makes a difference here.
06/06/2011 04:47:05 AM
- 1000 Views
Because thinking makes you LESS susceptible to these things you're afraid of
06/06/2011 05:27:26 PM
- 1029 Views
I don't completely agree with that.
06/06/2011 07:26:21 PM
- 985 Views
I feel like I just can't relate to parents determined to shelter their kids from everything
06/06/2011 10:21:44 PM
- 975 Views
To think the content described is acceptable, when they ban "Huck Finn" for using 'nigger'.
*NM*
05/06/2011 09:45:15 PM
- 309 Views

CNN: "On a website, a person named 'Macharius' used the 'N-word'".
06/06/2011 01:58:35 AM
- 762 Views
Parents have the right and resonsibility to know what their children are reading
06/06/2011 03:41:22 AM
- 792 Views
Re: Parents have the right and resonsibility to know what their children are reading
06/06/2011 12:40:24 PM
- 926 Views
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
- 1055 Views
Depends on the subject matter.
07/06/2011 01:07:57 PM
- 804 Views
Basically? Yes.
07/06/2011 06:42:04 PM
- 1049 Views
why do think there is value in letting them read whatever they want?
07/06/2011 06:52:20 PM
- 717 Views
Don't be an idiot.
09/06/2011 05:25:26 AM
- 901 Views
Well, I wrote a long piece related to this
06/06/2011 05:21:06 AM
- 989 Views
Great post. She really tries to muddy the waters relating to censorship and parenting.
06/06/2011 08:05:21 AM
- 871 Views
She kind of conflates some issues that are quite different, if you ask me.
06/06/2011 08:47:33 PM
- 926 Views
Wait wait wait wait wait... NYT reviewed Game of Thrones? I must read this
07/06/2011 03:20:08 AM
- 802 Views
Having now read one of the books mentioned, Cheryl Rainfield's Scars...
08/06/2011 02:18:23 AM
- 1025 Views