12 January 2009

From Self Absorbed to Self Aware - the Return of the Novel?

The novel’s great era didn’t just coincide with the rise of the university and the specialist because of rising levels of literacy – it helped to ameliorate the feelings of anomie and isolation of the specialist. Suddenly, a growing number of workers found themselves busy in tasks that required focus that excluded others and unique skills that made it difficult to relate to friends and families. The novel made us feel less alone.

But the novel did more than provide access to the inner life of others, giving us access to the psychic space of the woman in the apartment across the hall or the guy in the next office. It reassured us that our own insecurities, lusts, petty grievances, and imaginings did not make us freaks but, instead, made us part of the human race. Everyone, as it turns out, has some kind of struggle.

And yet today, the world of reality TV and Internet confessionals – media like blogs and YouTube – now provides us with ample reassurance that our petty neuroses and animal instincts are not unique. And maybe celebrity stories and powerful video has eroded reading.

But I think that this comes with a cost. Novels force reflection that video and quick articles or posts do not. In a novel, we’re forced to project ourselves into the lives of the character. A good novel will actually kick start our own process of reflection. A novel makes our own thoughts more articulate, providing us with not just vocabulary but vocabulary of the inner life. Through a great novel, we discover some portion of ourselves.

Gaining access to the inner life by video and celebrity scrutiny, by contrast, seems to confuse self absorption and self awareness. We lose ourselves in the characters we see but we are never really forced to consider our own lives, never made to reflect.

All this to report some potentially good news. By one measure, reading is still lower than it was in the early 1980s or 90s but rose over the last 12 months for the first time since 1982. If our mindless living –invasions, spending, and eating of the last few decades - has done anything, it has certainly provided us with material enough to think about. It might provoke us to become more contemplative, more reflective. Crazy optimist that I am, I love the notion of this possibility.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Maybe it's just that television finally got so bad that people are turning it off and looking for something else to do.

Ron Davison said...

Some evenings I sit in hotels at the end of the day, too spent to do much else but channel surf. I am almost always amazed by how much of nothing is going on. I can only conclude that there is less going on on the planet than there are mediums on which to broadcast it.

Anonymous said...

now tell that to the editors who are buying no new books

Lifehiker said...

No, Ron. There's plenty going on in the world. It's just that the news doesn't consider a lot of it important, even though some of the ignored stuff is probably very important but not recognized as such.

Did you hear, for example, that Ron Davison wrote this really interesting post about novels yesterday. Somehow the media missed it.

My favorite recent novel is http://www.amazon.com/Painter-Battles-Novel-Arturo-Perez-Reverte/dp/1400065984. I think the 3.5 star rating is because the novel is challenging for the average person. I loved it. It's plot is ingenious, the word painting is fabulous, and the dialogue engaging.

Ron Davison said...

Emily,
I'll see what I can do. Those publishers hang on my every word. I am like the Oprah of the blogosphere.

LH,
with 6 billion people, one would think that plenty is going on. Apparently little of it gets captured on film - or makes for good footage.