I suppose I'm giving a lot of credit to the status of "reader"
beetnemesis Send a noteboard - 07/06/2011 03:08:48 AM
I dunno, I remember growing up, and the kids who read for pleasure were... not necessarily "smarter" (although they often were), but they tended to be... broader? Better-grounded?
This is the point I'm having difficulty articulating, and am relying on the fact that everyone here reads for pleasure, and knows plenty of people who do not.
To put it bluntly, I'd be surprised, but not shocked, to see a kid go out and murder someone after watching 50 Saw-type movies. I find it impossible to realistically picture a murder stemming from the reading of 50 murder mysteries (at a normal pace, not any Clockwork Orange-style forcefeeding).
This is the point I'm having difficulty articulating, and am relying on the fact that everyone here reads for pleasure, and knows plenty of people who do not.
To put it bluntly, I'd be surprised, but not shocked, to see a kid go out and murder someone after watching 50 Saw-type movies. I find it impossible to realistically picture a murder stemming from the reading of 50 murder mysteries (at a normal pace, not any Clockwork Orange-style forcefeeding).
I amuse myself.
This WSJ article has kicked up a huge fuss on the internet - YA is "too dark".
- 05/06/2011 03:46:50 PM
2153 Views
There's only one thing about this literature that disturbs me
- 05/06/2011 05:39:35 PM
1124 Views
This is a thought out, finely articulated response.
- 05/06/2011 06:47:13 PM
1138 Views
If it were just vampires that would be just fine
- 05/06/2011 08:03:02 PM
907 Views
People have been complaining about this since the novel was invented
- 05/06/2011 11:02:58 PM
979 Views
Apparently the article did paint far too bleak a picture,
- 06/06/2011 12:39:46 PM
1064 Views
Why waste time with "YA literature" at all?
- 06/06/2011 02:14:03 PM
841 Views
Re: Why waste time with "YA literature" at all?
- 06/06/2011 02:28:42 PM
796 Views
I think that's a post factum justification, not a reason.
- 06/06/2011 05:08:09 PM
1008 Views
Maybe. It's hard to separate, I think.
- 07/06/2011 01:06:29 PM
1031 Views
One certainly has to choose the real literature to present, certainly.
- 07/06/2011 02:27:00 PM
1068 Views
Very good post.
- 06/06/2011 08:52:22 PM
883 Views
You seem to be the only one who thinks so.
*NM*
- 07/06/2011 01:17:18 AM
317 Views
*NM*
- 07/06/2011 01:17:18 AM
317 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
1129 Views
Suicide rates have gone up significantly
- 07/06/2011 02:42:55 PM
790 Views
Heh.
- 08/06/2011 07:24:44 PM
1109 Views
you are having trouble finding cultural ideas that turned bad?
- 08/06/2011 11:56:23 PM
1021 Views
The classic problem of the overprotective parent- underestimating your kids
- 09/06/2011 05:33:54 AM
984 Views
the classic problem of people who have no idea what they are talking about
- 09/06/2011 04:16:25 PM
899 Views
Are you really equating reading about trauma with trauma? They are not the same. *NM*
- 09/06/2011 07:10:34 PM
332 Views
I'm sure the percentage of good books must be higher than they make it sound,
- 05/06/2011 05:53:21 PM
1164 Views
I'd say books offer a fundamentally different experience than movies
- 05/06/2011 06:53:55 PM
1121 Views
I'm not sure that makes a difference here.
- 06/06/2011 04:47:05 AM
1098 Views
Because thinking makes you LESS susceptible to these things you're afraid of
- 06/06/2011 05:27:26 PM
1135 Views
I don't completely agree with that.
- 06/06/2011 07:26:21 PM
1082 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
1058 Views
I don't think that is what this is.
- 06/06/2011 10:41:06 PM
955 Views
I suppose I'm giving a lot of credit to the status of "reader"
- 07/06/2011 03:08:48 AM
953 Views
To think the content described is acceptable, when they ban "Huck Finn" for using 'nigger'.
*NM*
- 05/06/2011 09:45:15 PM
340 Views
*NM*
- 05/06/2011 09:45:15 PM
340 Views
CNN: "On a website, a person named 'Macharius' used the 'N-word'".
- 06/06/2011 01:58:35 AM
840 Views
Parents have the right and resonsibility to know what their children are reading
- 06/06/2011 03:41:22 AM
862 Views
Re: Parents have the right and resonsibility to know what their children are reading
- 06/06/2011 12:40:24 PM
1017 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
1128 Views
Depends on the subject matter.
- 07/06/2011 01:07:57 PM
883 Views
Basically? Yes.
- 07/06/2011 06:42:04 PM
1128 Views
why do think there is value in letting them read whatever they want?
- 07/06/2011 06:52:20 PM
795 Views
Don't be an idiot.
- 09/06/2011 05:25:26 AM
980 Views
Well, I wrote a long piece related to this
- 06/06/2011 05:21:06 AM
1085 Views
Great post. She really tries to muddy the waters relating to censorship and parenting.
- 06/06/2011 08:05:21 AM
952 Views
She kind of conflates some issues that are quite different, if you ask me.
- 06/06/2011 08:47:33 PM
1017 Views
Wait wait wait wait wait... NYT reviewed Game of Thrones? I must read this
- 07/06/2011 03:20:08 AM
882 Views
Having now read one of the books mentioned, Cheryl Rainfield's Scars...
- 08/06/2011 02:18:23 AM
1129 Views
