dr_mabeuse
seduce the mind
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2002
- Posts
- 11,528
The first law of reading: If you don't like the damned thing, don't force yourself to read it! What in the world is the point of that?
It is good to challenge yourself and read above what you usually might choose for the beach, but what in the world good does it do you to force yourself to read Dickens or Flaubert or Milton if you don't enjoy it? Just so you can say you endured it? Why do people still think they have to torture themselves with books?
Classics are considered classics because a lot of people over the years have found that they seem reward the reader with deep pleasure. But if it doesn't do it for you, then the hell with it.
I was an English major too, and I would never curl up with a copy of Plato or Dickens or Jane Austin half the stuff they had us read in college, bcause I just don't care for them and find them dull as dirt. (And honestly, whose going to curl up a glass of lemonade and a copy of Kant or Marx or Nietsche? You'd have to be insane! Or a philosophy major, which is the same thing.) We were being taught the history and evolution of prose and poetry in college, so we had to read that stuff, but you don't, and trying to force your way through War and Peace will probably do nothing more than produce another person who thinks that this whole business about "literature" is just a bunch of academic bullshit
What a totally creepy little weirdo story
It is good to challenge yourself and read above what you usually might choose for the beach, but what in the world good does it do you to force yourself to read Dickens or Flaubert or Milton if you don't enjoy it? Just so you can say you endured it? Why do people still think they have to torture themselves with books?
Classics are considered classics because a lot of people over the years have found that they seem reward the reader with deep pleasure. But if it doesn't do it for you, then the hell with it.
I was an English major too, and I would never curl up with a copy of Plato or Dickens or Jane Austin half the stuff they had us read in college, bcause I just don't care for them and find them dull as dirt. (And honestly, whose going to curl up a glass of lemonade and a copy of Kant or Marx or Nietsche? You'd have to be insane! Or a philosophy major, which is the same thing.) We were being taught the history and evolution of prose and poetry in college, so we had to read that stuff, but you don't, and trying to force your way through War and Peace will probably do nothing more than produce another person who thinks that this whole business about "literature" is just a bunch of academic bullshit
SelenaKittyn said:My all time favorite short story:
The Yellow Wallpaper, Charlotte Perkins Gilman
What a totally creepy little weirdo story