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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "College English Majors Can't Read"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I was a college English major and I’ve read and loved all types of literature. I think we need to separate different kinds of “hard,” because one matters and the other is a distraction. One reason Dickens is hard is the antique language. When Bleak House was written it was the beach read of the times - it wasn’t considered difficult. Because it was written in the vernacular. I see no real urgency in making sure people can read Shakespeare or Chaucer. Should English majors? Yes, even if they don’t love it, they should read some of where our language and literature came from. All kids should be taught how to read, analyze, and understand meaningful text, though. Plot, metaphor, argument, character development, voice…those are all important. I’m not particularly fussed, though, about what sort of books kids read in order to understand those things, though. Pride and Prejudice is chick lit, but “hard” to read because of language. Harry Potter is easy to read because of its simple language written for children, but it can serve just fine to train kids to identify the important elements in literature and enjoy them. I wonder if this study had used modern literature - say, The Kite Runner, Life of Pi, etc - whether they would have had different results. Archaic language doesn’t making literature better, it just makes it old.[/quote] I agree, well written. Archaic language turns a lot of kids off. There are so many quality books written in the last hundred years that are overlooked because they won’t let go of Shakespeare. I like fiction with stories that happened during a significant time in history. A family living in Alabama in 1963 for example. There are excellent quality books about the civil rights movement or the Holocaust that have much more value than yet another Shakespeare play. [/quote]
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