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Thursday, April 26, 2018

Week Sixteen Prompt


            The experience of reading has become more complicated since I was a child in the late 1990s to early 2000s in the United States. I feel that books strongly reflect current trends in American culture, such as the trend of equally representing all individuals in pieces of information and the trend of placing a stronger emphasis on the group of persons of GBLTQ in novels. The aspect of social justice is also more prominent towards the creation of books in the present time, since the concept of social justice has been heavily emphasized by the culture of the internet. Since my childhood, more formats for books have been developed, such as digital ebooks and audiobook CDs, as opposed to physical books and the audio cassette tapes of books in my past. In addition, the general shift towards the digitization of printed information in books and widespread accessibility and acceptance of electronic text is a massive change from reading during my childhood. Also, books are presently available in a multimedia formats. During my childhood, books could only be constructed around one specific format.
            Also, I don’t know what trends in reading will occur in twenty years, so I can only give guesses based on my observations and on certain readings from the class. I think that publishing will become more intense in twenty years of time. Many authors currently try to sell their individually published novels through online publishers, such as Amazon.com, so I would argue that authors will continue to publish their novels through companies that utilize the internet or through online retailers. In some ways, reading will become more interactive with the stronger incorporation of multimedia formats and the integration of the idea of having multiple endings in the process of reading books. This idea may stem from the idea of authors not assuming responsibility towards certain events or the ending of a certain novel. However, the idea of an interactive book may merely arise from letting readers decide their own ending or allowing the readers to be excited by sudden twists in the book’s narrative by permitting the readers to directly choose the outcome of the book’s events.
            I also believe that traditional publishing will greatly diminish, since a greater emphasis will be placed on online publishing or independent publishing. Traditional publishers of books will slowly go out of business, as authors publish titles under massive corporations, such as Barnes & Noble. However, traditional publishers will still appeal to old-fashioned readers or to readers from a group of individuals from approximately forty to ninety years of age, since these individuals will be used to the idea of reading physical novels from traditional publishers. So, there should be a small following of individuals who will sustain the profits of traditional publishers in the future.  
            In addition, I believe that the activity of reading books will be extremely popular among a teenage demographic or a demographic group of individuals in their twenties and thirties, since I have observed that these demographic groups read at great rate in the present day. Individuals will read more a considerable amount more than they currently do, since I believe that the amount of current reading from ordinary individuals has exploded with online publishing. Also, if escapism is heavily emphasized as a reason for today’s reading culture, then it is probable that individuals will desire to read at an extremely high degree in the future in order to escape the hardships of a technologically progressing world.
            Personally, the strong possibility of this occurring in twenty years disgusts me. I feel that a dramatic increase in reading will be a double-edged sword in the future. The increase in the amount of published works may promote an increase in knowledge when facts and parallels to real life are incorporated in books, but the effect from individuals reading a great amount of fiction titles will be devastating. Individuals will become obsessed over details that are meaningless. Tropes will be worn thin in fictional novels. Characters will also feel flat and uninspired, since the attributes of the characters have been created by other authors in the past, and the characters will lack a quality that is truly appealing in horde of online and physical books that have been published. Nevertheless, the classic tropes in the titles of fiction will beckon to masses of fans, and the fans will continue to read.
            In addition, the act of reading books will be often accomplished in order fulfill “a social need” (Le Guin, 2008, p. 3). Specifically, individuals will desire “to experience and share great stories” to fulfill their social needs (Hollands, 2016, p. 27). So, individuals will read in order to better appeal socially to their friends and to remain self-absorbed. These individuals will desire books that “everybody is reading” (Le Guin, 2008, p. 3), and the individuals will utilize the content of the books for a mere opportunity to connect themselves with other human beings (Le Guin, 2008, p. 3).
            I also believe that many individuals currently read for themselves, and they will continue to read for themselves in twenty years. Individuals don’t usually read for knowledge or wisdom, but they will read for an emotional release. Some individuals will read for critical analysis, but few individuals will think for themselves. Due to the ubiquitous presence of the internet in the future, individuals will primarily rely on the opinions and reviews of others in relation to reading books and ignore arriving at their unique conclusions of certain books. Individuals will often follow unanimous opinions of the crowd and avoid writing controversial statements on social media websites, such as Goodreads or Facebook, when discussing their opinions on certain books.
            It should also be noted that publishers currently “get away with making boring, baloney-mill novels into bestsellers via mere P.R. because people need bestsellers” (Le Guin, 2008, p. 3). So, in twenty years, I would expect popular series, such as The Hunger Games, to drastically fade from human memory from the books’ sheer dissonance with reality and from the author’s reliance on serving the needs of the public through the aspects of the books in order to sell a suitable amount of printed or electronic copies. If this trend does not occur in the future, then a hollow sense of nostalgia towards the books will likely triumph.
            In addition, the world of reading will continue to remain as a pointless and fanatical juggernaut in twenty years. Within the last twenty years, the internet has probably exacerbated the problem of reading fiction at a drastic rate, but the popularity of reading fictional titles of different genres has always remained fanatical. The fanaticism about Frank Herbert’s Dune in the past is hardly different from the zeal of fans towards the newest Game of Thrones novel in the present day, so I expect that spirit of fanaticism towards books to remain in the next twenty years. Individuals will pointlessly compare aspects of fiction with elements of reality through relating reality back towards fantasy and making fantasy adhere to reality. Both women and men will be pointlessly drawn to the allure of fiction and will be mysteriously excited by its promise of relief and of satisfaction in relation to a real world that unfortunately appears boring or meaningless to those readers.
            Nevertheless, the unique voices of literature and the sole impact of an individual or a group effort in a work never appears to die. If the voices and impact do die, then the deaths will be slow. The content of literary materials will transcend time, since individuals will need “to be able to have books to suit” their every mood (Saricks, 2009, p. 11).
            Since timeless stories and snapshots of authors’ voices have been created in the past for certain novels, the future will also reflect this unique occurrence. Individuals will not primarily focus on the aspect of fondly remembering works of great fiction, but they will focus on the achievement of the voices who created the works. The books will be viewed as a recording of the past and of the knowledge, memories, and beliefs of the individuals who created the books.
            Titles of true literature will not only serve the needs of the public in the future, and there will be sparks of inspiration and life-like qualities within the titles. Titles will be constructed that reflect a triumph of human freedom. The construction of titles will celebrate life in a general sense and will make one more deeply consider the various elements of life in the future. These titles will be stories “that feed our spirits, our emotions, and our intellects” (Saricks, 2009, p. 11).
References:
Hollands, N. (2016). Every book its reader: after the renaissance. Booklist, (7). 27. Retrieved
from http://eds.b.ebscohost.com.proxy.ulib.uits.iu.edu/eds/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=6&sid=9c3128f8-8641-43cf-80c9-80ba08196ebd@pdc-v-sessmgr01
Le Guin, U. K. (2008). Staying awake: notes on the alleged decline of reading. Harper's
Magazine, 316(1893). Retrieved from
https://iu.instructure.com/courses/1702577/files/folder/Week%2016?preview=75530224
Saricks, J. G. (2009). The readers’ advisory guide to genre fiction (2nd ed.). Chicago, IL:
            American Library Association.

1 comment:

  1. It can't be scary to think about the future and the uncertainties out there. Full points and good job speculating!

    ReplyDelete