Saturday, October 2, 2010

Politics and fiction don't mix

Kevin Hartnett, a staff writer for The Millions and regular contributor to the Christian Science Monitor, laments his diminished appetite for reading fiction in our Facebook Epoch:
All forms of desire have their natural enemies and I find that nothing saps my desire to read fiction like the Internet does. This is partly physiological—too much time at the computer withers my brain—but it’s partly dispositional, too. After the last round of primaries a couple Tuesdays ago, I spent an hour reading articles about the Tea Party. When I came up for air I was in an explicitly present-tense state of mind where anything written more than an hour ago seemed to be based on a world that had already been subsumed. Novels, which require a willingness to attend to more enduring themes, don’t hold up very well by this perspective.

No comments:

Post a Comment