An event I've organized--mark your calendars!
READING AT RISK? A PANEL DISCUSSIONPosted by mgk at September 24, 2004 12:52 PMReleased in July of this year, the National Endowment for the Arts' "Reading at Risk" report garnered widespread attention for its dramatic and troubling findings, chief among which were that there has been a documented 10% national decline in "literary reading" since 1982, with the drop-off even more precipitous among younger age groups. (The report is available in its entirety online at: http://www.nea.gov/pub/ReadingAtRisk.pdf). These findings are surely of concern to anyone who cares about the future of reading and a literate populace. But what *is* reading in the current day and age? What can we learn from the history of media change, where previous moments of technological transition have been accompanied by similar expressions of anxiety and concern? Or are we truly facing an uprecedented shift in what and how and why we read? What are the implications for education? The arts? Public policy and civics? Join us on Thursday, November 18th, 2:00-3:45, in the McKeldin Special Events Room for a discussion of this issue, featuring a number of distinguished speakers from the College Park campus and beyond:
MARK BAUERLEIN, Director of Research and Analysis at the National Endowment for the Arts. He is also Professor of English at Emory University. He has written many books and articles on American literature, history, and philosophy, and his commentaries and reviews have appeared in Wall Street Journal, The Weekly Standard, TLS, Yale Review, Chronicle of Higher Education, and many other national periodicals.
MICHAEL COLLIER, Professor of English and Co-Director of Creative Writing at UMCP, and former Poet Laureate of the State of Maryland. Professor Collier is the author of several books and collections, and over 100 published poems.
LISA GITELMAN, Associate Professor of English and Director of Media Studies at Catholic University. Professor Gitleman is the author of Scripts, Grooves, and Writing Machines (Stanford UP, 1999) and co-editor of New Media 1740-1915 (MIT Press, 2003).
SHIRLEY LOGAN, Professor of English at UMCP and former Chair of the Conference on College Composition and Communication (the 4Cs). She is the author of "We Are Coming": The Persuasive Discourse of Nineteenth-Century Black Women (Southern Illinois, 1999) and co-editor of many other books.
CLIFFORD LYNCH, Director of the Coalition for Networked Information. He is a past president of the American Society for Information Science and a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the National Information Standards Organization.
NICK MONTFORT, co-editor of the New Media Reader (MIT Press, 2003) and author of Twisty Little Passages: An Approach to Interfactive Fiction (MIT Press, 2004). Currently a Ph.D. candidate in computer science at the University of Pennsylvania, Montfort is also a highly-regarded writer of interactive fiction.
The panel will be moderated by MATTHEW KIRSCHENBAUM, Assistant Professor of English at UMCP. It is intended to be of broad topical interest to a diverse and interdisciplinary audience. Free and open to the public; entire classes welcome.
Sponsored by the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH) and the Department of English. Please contact Matt Kirschenbaum (mgk "at" umd "dot" edu) with questions.
the thing is, this is mainly only a problem in the states. every other country ive travelled to books were advertised on billboards, tvs, everyone would be reading on the subways, buses, everywhere, and when you mention to someone that you like to write they would immediately ask you all about the various books youve read and recommend to you their favorites.
should be a heated discussion to say the least.
Posted by: robbie at September 24, 2004 02:04 PMI'm also taking AMST432 Literature in America (or something like that) and we read this study for the first week of class. All of our class discussions are based on the premise that people in America are not reading...
heated discussions for sure.
I think its television and media's grasp on American Culture. Why do you think 98% of the world's ridalin perscriptions are in the good ol U S of A? Our culture doesn't have time for the printed literature of authors. Its all about the hurry hurry hurry. Why read when you can watch? Why walk when you can drive. It falls along the same path.
Posted by: Faryan at September 26, 2004 11:34 PM