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To E or not to E?
Do people really read books any more, and does
anyone care about
the romantic appeal of the printed page? Two recent New York Times
articles offered opposing arguments on the future of the book. Acclaimed
literary critic Harold Bloom dug his heels in on tradition, citing the intimacy of the
printed page, while Slate's editor Jacob Weisberg sang the praises of the
ebook.
Bloom is a self confessed Dinosaur, an academic
traditionalist married forever to the idea of literature as high art. He
makes no secret of a loathing sentiment for the glass page. In fact, he
goes as far as to say that "the Internet is like the Congo. I know it
exists but I will never go there". Surprisingly non-pragmatic, one
might say, for a decorated Yale faculty member.
Weisberg, on the other hand, points out the
many compelling reasons he sees for the ebook. Supporting Weisberg's
advocacy of the digital novel is its incarnation in the portable format afforded by new devices like the RocketBook and HP's new Pocket
PC. Throw in the heavyweight software support of products like
Microsoft's Reader, and one can sense that a change has come.
Bloom's essay makes for an enjoyable read, a
warm, satisfying satire on the effect technology and the age of the soundbyte
has had on people's ability to reach for higher levels of self through the arts,
and more particularly literature. In acknowledging that there is a market
for electronic books, he states clearly that he is "not a Luddite."
His case is more that reading from a book is "only minimally
visual." Qualifying this, he goes on: "The tyranny of the bodily
eye is usurped by the inner ear, which is a metaphor for the mind exercising all
its powers." As he argues, Michael Crichton readers may enjoy ebooks, but then again, they enjoy Michael Crichton.
Read Bloom's "On First Looking
Into Gate's Crichton" here.
Read Weisberg's "The
Way We Live Now:The Good E-Book" here.
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