Thursday
I write today about a well-researched and very disturbing Atlantic article by Rose Horowitz that provocatively announces, “The End of Reading Is here: Optimists once believed that universal literacy was inevitable. Now it seems that the age of reading might be a short anomaly in human history.”
To be sure, the article itself has to qualify this claim in one important way, observing that, what with emails, text messages, X posts, Reddit threads, and Instagram captions, Americans are actually reading “more words than ever before.” The worry is that this “explosion of literary fragments” comes
at the expense of devoting sustained attention to longer written works that convey rich and complicated information. Maryanne Wolf, a cognitive neuroscientist at UCLA, argues that people are losing the ability to think deeply about writing. That doesn’t mean they are forgetting how to decode individual words. Rather, they are losing the higher-order abilities of comprehension and synthesis. America, in other words, isn’t illiterate. It’s postliterate.
What follows is a litany of instances of how the decline in long reading has led to decreased thinking capability, just as the advent of AI is eroding writing skills. Skill levels that were once increasing are now on the wane. And although people are still buying books and new bookstores are opening, Horowitz said that those number mask the extent of the crisis:
[O]ptimists overlook a crucial thread in the data: Text is thriving among a dwindling proportion of the population. Just 20 percent of adults accounted for more than 80 percent of all books read last year. “It’s becoming a kind of niche hobby, like stamp collecting or growing orchids,” Leah Price, a historian of reading at Rutgers University, told me. Readers spend more time reading each day than they did two decades ago. They appear to be even more passionate about print than their predecessors. But the people devoted to text, who derive cultural understanding and intellectual connection from the written word, are now part of a subculture.
Observing that books “used to be an essential source of knowledge, memory, wisdom, and morality” that passed from one generation to the next, now information “moves horizontally, from young person to young person.” The decline of reading, she writes, “didn’t turn the world upside down. It turned the world sideways.”
There are occasional signs of hope in this otherwise depressing article. Reporting that two dozen states have banned cellphones during the school day, Horotwitz says that, following such a ban, last year a Dallas school district
saw 200,000 more library books checked out compared with the year before, a nearly 25 percent increase. Rex Ovalle, a high-school English teacher in the Chicago suburbs and a member of the National Council of Teachers of English, told me he’s seen pushback against excerpts; some teachers are adding whole books back into their curriculum. Felton Thomas Jr., the executive director of the Cleveland Public Library, said that its youngest patrons have joined senior citizens in preferring print books to digital copies.
“If these acts of defiance against a postliterate culture seem futile,” Horowitz writes, “the holdouts lose nothing by trying.”
Horowitz sees herself as someone with a foot in both camps, having been raised in a reading family but having a cellphone and an Instagram account by the time she was in seventh grade. Because I’m a sucker for reading stories, here’s the one that she shares. Her father, like mine, read to her up through seventh grade, and she loved reading The Boxcar Children with her siblings. (It was Narnia and Tolkien for me.) Then, when she reached high school,
I got it in my head that I should read the classics. My teachers kept recommending their favorite books. I wanted to share in their knowledge and understand their references. I slogged through Jane Eyre and fell for Anna Karenina. Although I was alone while reading, I didn’t feel that way. These books contained the wisdom of generations. As James Baldwin said (in a 1963 Life profile, just a week after he appeared on the cover of Time): “You think your pain and your heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read. It was Dostoevsky and Dickens who taught me that the things that tormented me most were the very things that connected me with all the people who were alive, or who ever had been alive.” I felt like I was part of an unbroken chain of knowledge and culture.
Horowitz acknowledges that the habit slipped in the years that followed—”I became busier. I started scrolling on my phone before bed instead of reading. My attention began to wander every few pages”—and it’s true that reading is a muscle that must be maintained. I recently recommended reading “like a Victorian,” a few pages every night, as a way to keep that muscle fit.
But before we surrender to Horowitz’s doomsday scenario, it good to remember the literature gets a say in the matter. In a world where we are fed continuously with lies, literature is a no bullshit zone that puts us in connection with truth. Or as Salman Rushdie puts it, the job of contemporary writers is “rebuilding our readers’ belief in reality.”
While Horowitz is right to focus on the various setbacks that reading, writing, and literature are experiencing at the moment, the enduring power of truth to stand against the “explosion of reading fragments” cannot be discounted. The various reversals that Horowitz mentions, from declining IQ and test scores to lower tolerance for mental exertion to fewer humanities majors are indeed unfortunate, but if we are currently experiencing some backsliding, it’s good to remember that Enlightenment progress has never progressed in a straight upward line. In the end, people have always returned to literature because nothing else speaks as well to our deepest needs. As I write in my book’s conclusion, people
intuitively recognize that masterworks, whether old classics or new arrivals, have the power to point us towards the individual and social transformation we crave. These works can turn us upside down and inside out as no other form of writing can….The thinkers we have surveyed in this book know literature is more powerful and challenging than … simplistic ways of thinking, as do good literature teachers, librarians and other of literature’s advocates. They know—and you do as well—that a rich life opens before us the moment we pick up a book and immerse ourselves in its words.
In short, while we should take seriously the threats posed to literacy by social media and AI, we shouldn’t overlook the power of literature to push back, which it has been doing for as long as there has been literature. An image that comes to mind when I say this is resurrected Aslan in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. While the Witch appears to triumph in the short run, she doesn’t reckon with what Aslan calls “the deeper magic from before the dawn of time.”
If the forces of barbarism couldn’t wipe out the classics over the centuries, there’s no reason to think that Tik-Tok, Instagram, youtube, video games, streaming services, and all those other electronic distractions will be any more successful. Despite Horowitz’s fears that we are entering a postliterate age, literature itself is far from dead.










