Go Back   Sonic Youth Gossip > Non-Sonics
Reload this Page Literature, Literacy, and the advance of human civilization
Register FAQ Members List Mark Forums Read

 
Thread Tools
Old 01.20.2008, 06:17 PM   #21
Glice
invito al cielo
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 12,664
Glice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's asses
Yeah. Reading as empowerment. I'm down with that. Although I'd rather the kids were reading something other than Harry Potter/ Dan Brown, but anything is good. Reading is brain engagement.

Episodically, I have one of my tirades about how people who read should endeavour to read better books - rather than Pratchett, Ovid - that sort of thing. Which I semi stand by, but then any brain engagement is worth it.
__________________
Message boards are the last vestige of the spent masturbator, still intent on wasting time in some neg-heroic fashion. Be damned all who sail here.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Savage Clone
Last time I was in Chicago I spent an hour in a Nazi submarine with a banjo player.
Glice is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.20.2008, 06:18 PM   #22
Glice
invito al cielo
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 12,664
Glice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by Confucious is sex
LOSES*

*I love you?
__________________
Message boards are the last vestige of the spent masturbator, still intent on wasting time in some neg-heroic fashion. Be damned all who sail here.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Savage Clone
Last time I was in Chicago I spent an hour in a Nazi submarine with a banjo player.
Glice is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.20.2008, 07:00 PM   #23
gualbert
the end of the ugly
 
gualbert's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,088
gualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's asses
Harry Potter sucks , but Da Vinci Code is a great book.
gualbert is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.20.2008, 07:15 PM   #24
Alex's Trip
invito al cielo
 
Alex's Trip's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Southern California
Posts: 5,608
Alex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's assesAlex's Trip kicks all y'all's asses
No. Harry Potter rules, Dan Brown sucks.
__________________
KALOPSIA
Alex's Trip is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.20.2008, 07:48 PM   #25
LifeDistortion
expwy. to yr skull
 
LifeDistortion's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: CA
Posts: 2,457
LifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's assesLifeDistortion kicks all y'all's asses
One man's Shakespeare, is another's Grisham. I think it just comes to personal taste. You shoulden't force or ridicule some one for their tastes, no matter how questionable they are.
LifeDistortion is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.20.2008, 08:00 PM   #26
pbradley
invito al cielo
 
pbradley's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: SoKo
Posts: 10,621
pbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's assespbradley kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by Confucious is sex
LOSES*
sigh
pbradley is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.20.2008, 09:31 PM   #27
Inhuman
invito al cielo
 
Inhuman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Montreal
Posts: 5,807
Inhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's assesInhuman kicks all y'all's asses
Right on Spectral. Reading can also benefit training the brain to focus, something that a good chunk of people lack nowadays. I was never really into reading until only recently, and I realized that books had a consistancy that random wikipedia articles of related subjects do not. I've been reading books on psychology, interpersonal behaviour, and philosophy lately which I find really puts me a step a head, and I enjoy this new-old means of absorbing information
__________________
Inhuman no longer dwells on here. http://about.me/robinbastien
Inhuman is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.20.2008, 10:29 PM   #28
jonathan
children of satan
 
jonathan's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 320
jonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's assesjonathan kicks all y'all's asses
I read James Joyce today and I feel like I've accomplished something.
jonathan is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.20.2008, 11:58 PM   #29
SpectralJulianIsNotDead
invito al cielo
 
SpectralJulianIsNotDead's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 7,409
SpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's asses
There is a James Joyce reference in "Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said" a young girl quotes Finnegan's Wake.

I don't know if I'd like Joyce. He seems to be recognized first and foremost for his writing style.
SpectralJulianIsNotDead is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 03:26 AM   #30
Glice
invito al cielo
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 12,664
Glice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's assesGlice kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by SpectralJulianIsNotDead
There is a James Joyce reference in "Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said" a young girl quotes Finnegan's Wake.

I don't know if I'd like Joyce. He seems to be recognized first and foremost for his writing style.

He's notorious for Finngans Wake which is a masterpiece of not making any sense in the way that books are meant to. Ulysses I a little less daunting, but Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man is a very delicate and readable. Same for Dubliners. Check those out first.
__________________
Message boards are the last vestige of the spent masturbator, still intent on wasting time in some neg-heroic fashion. Be damned all who sail here.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Savage Clone
Last time I was in Chicago I spent an hour in a Nazi submarine with a banjo player.
Glice is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 04:01 AM   #31
m1rr0r dash
invito al cielo
 
m1rr0r dash's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: atari
Posts: 2,228
m1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's assesm1rr0r dash kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by gualbert
Harry Potter sucks , but Da Vinci Code is a great book.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Alex's Trip
No. Harry Potter rules, Dan Brown sucks.

harry potter, meh. dan brown ripped off umberto eco.
__________________
 
m1rr0r dash is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 05:03 AM   #32
terminal pharmacy
invito al cielo
 
terminal pharmacy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 3,358
terminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's assesterminal pharmacy kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by Glice
He's notorious for Finngans Wake which is a masterpiece of not making any sense in the way that books are meant to. Ulysses I a little less daunting, but Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man is a very delicate and readable. Same for Dubliners. Check those out first.

Is Ulysses based on Homer's Odyssey?
terminal pharmacy is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 05:20 AM   #33
sonicl
invito al cielo
 
sonicl's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 9,527
sonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's assessonicl kicks all y'all's asses
I love to read, but I think that the biggest obstacle to people enjoying reading is that they read what they feel they ought to read, rather than what they want to read. They force themselves to read Camus and Cocteau (for example) because they believe it is an important intellectual exercise, but their brains aren't necessarily ready for philosophical meanderings. People need to read the Dan Browns and the J K Rowlings in order to get their brains used to the exercise of reading and understanding.

That said, I prefer to use reading either as education or entertainment, rather than as an intellectual exercise.
sonicl is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 05:36 AM   #34
!@#$%!
invito al cielo
 
!@#$%!'s Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: mars attacks
Posts: 42,516
!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by sonicl
I love to read, but I think that the biggest obstacle to people enjoying reading is that they read what they feel they ought to read, rather than what they want to read. They force themselves to read Camus and Cocteau (for example) because they believe it is an important intellectual exercise, but their brains aren't necessarily ready for philosophical meanderings. People need to read the Dan Browns and the J K Rowlings in order to get their brains used to the exercise of reading and understanding.

That said, I prefer to use reading either as education or entertainment, rather than as an intellectual exercise.

yes yes yes. borges used to say that people should never read what they didn't like-- so he always had a hard time being a teacher. the only point i'd refute based on semantics is that "education" but not 'intellectual exercise". aren't they both a little bit the same? isn't reading camus for the intellectual execise an educational reason?

in that sense, if people had the habit of reading from childhood, they'd eventually "graduate" to more complex readings, not because of snobberies and afffectations but simply because tastes change with use and practice.

the same way that, as children, one used to love the taste of, say, ice cream from the truck, but as grownups, if offered good humor as dessert in a great reastaurant one would laugh it off as a prank. i remember as a little kid, i loved the smell of bacon so much i wondered why they didn't make cologne with its smell.

anyway, i've been reading since i was a little shit, and in my travels even went to grad school to read and read, to the point of nausea, so i can't inflict any more crap upon my mind-- it has to be good or else... in other words, crapola doesn't give me pleasure anymore, and these days i leave many a mediocre book unfinished, like a rancid twinkie.

a small digression to invite potential readers-- cocteau, unlike camus, was not a philosopher but a sick bastard poet. les enfants terribles is deliciously perverted. a must.
!@#$%! is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 05:42 AM   #35
!@#$%!
invito al cielo
 
!@#$%!'s Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: mars attacks
Posts: 42,516
!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses!@#$%! kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by SpectralJulianIsNotDead
There is a James Joyce reference in "Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said" a young girl quotes Finnegan's Wake.

I don't know if I'd like Joyce. He seems to be recognized first and foremost for his writing style.

what glice said. start with dubliners, progress to the artist, see if some day you muster the cojones to start ulysses, and maybe before you die you'll dare delve into the nocturnal mysteries of the wake (i haven't made it past the first 2 pages).

dubliners will definitely not disappoint, many a great short story, and many (mother of all cliches) delicate images, and "the dead" probably a masterpiece, to be read only at the end. it's all about ireland so a critical edition might help clarify some obscurities, like who the fuck parnell was, etc.
!@#$%! is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 09:11 AM   #36
gualbert
the end of the ugly
 
gualbert's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,088
gualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's assesgualbert kicks all y'all's asses
I don't find anything intellectual or interesting about Camus.
The Stranger: an empty book with an empty hero.
gualbert is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 09:51 AM   #37
floatingslowly
invito al cielo
 
floatingslowly's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 21,165
floatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's assesfloatingslowly kicks all y'all's asses
according to Steve Jobs: "people don't read anymore".

I read several books a month, but then again, I'm not people.

beep.
floatingslowly is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 11:21 AM   #38
SpectralJulianIsNotDead
invito al cielo
 
SpectralJulianIsNotDead's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 7,409
SpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's assesSpectralJulianIsNotDead kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by sonicl
I love to read, but I think that the biggest obstacle to people enjoying reading is that they read what they feel they ought to read, rather than what they want to read. They force themselves to read Camus and Cocteau (for example) because they believe it is an important intellectual exercise, but their brains aren't necessarily ready for philosophical meanderings. People need to read the Dan Browns and the J K Rowlings in order to get their brains used to the exercise of reading and understanding.

That said, I prefer to use reading either as education or entertainment, rather than as an intellectual exercise.

I think in a way you are sort of right. I read a lot of Star Wars books, Michael Crichton books, and Tom Clancy books before I started reading anything good. I think the first really good book I read was Catch-22 when I was 16.
SpectralJulianIsNotDead is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 12:03 PM   #39
SuchFriendsAreDangerous
invito al cielo
 
SuchFriendsAreDangerous's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: fucking Los Angeles
Posts: 14,801
SuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's assesSuchFriendsAreDangerous kicks all y'all's asses
 


all jokes aside, everybody realizes that religion is the origin and source of the written word, and in the western tradition, this bible which everyone believes is a load of crap is the source of European language and writing. It is the bible which preserved literacy in Europe, and subsequently the western world.
__________________
Today Rap music is the Lakers
 
SuchFriendsAreDangerous is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|
Old 01.21.2008, 12:50 PM   #40
Rob Instigator
invito al cielo
 
Rob Instigator's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: In the land of the Instigator
Posts: 27,943
Rob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's assesRob Instigator kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by SuchFriendsAreDangerous
 


all jokes aside, everybody realizes that religion is the origin and source of the written word, and in the western tradition, this bible which everyone believes is a load of crap is the source of European language and writing. It is the bible which preserved literacy in Europe, and subsequently the western world.

that's a FUCKING JOKE
the goddamned church preserved ILLITERACY for hundreds of years by not allowing the masses to read the bible (and by presenting their mass amss in latin, a long-dead language). there are many roman catholic churches in south america and africa and asia where this is still the prescribed practice, straight out of the motherfucking dark ages.

you have no knowledge of world linguistic history. if you did you would know that the written language was created in ancient sumerian times (pre-bible and pre-hebrews) as a means of keeping RECORDS, ussually crop records and sales records.

in other words, "the origin and source of the written word" is in BOOK-KEEPING and COMMERCE, not, I yell, NOT in religion.

you really ahve a deeply judeochristian-centric view of the history of the world my friend.
__________________
RXTT's Intellectual Journey - my new blog where I talk about all the books I read.
Rob Instigator is offline   |QUOTE AND REPLY|


Thread Tools

All content ©2006 Sonic Youth