E-reader revolt: I’m leaving youth culture behind
“So is my overly personal, defensive reaction to the e-reader boom nothing more than pre-emptive fear of the future, of change in general? I’d like to think I’m slightly more mature than that, but at its core my visceral hatred of the computer screen-as-book is at least partially comprised of sadness at the thought of kids growing up differently from how I did, of the rituals associated with learning to read — and learning to love to read — ceasing to resemble yours and mine. Nine-year-olds currently exist who will recall, years from now, the first time they read “Charlotte’s Web” on their iPads, and I’m going to have to let that go. For me, there’s just still something universal about ink on paper, the dog-earing of yellowed pages, the loans to friends, the discovery of a relative’s secret universe of interests via the pile on their nightstand. And it’s not really hyperbole to say it makes me feel disconnected from humanity to imagine these rituals funneled into copy/paste functions, annotated files on a screen that could, potentially, crash.”
Emma Silvers you’re not alone.
just dumb, it really is. Stupid. Dumb. I’m not arguing this for...arguing, I truly feel...
It it isn’t on paper then I take forever to read it. -instant hatred-
I am only seventeen years old, and I agree with Casey and Emma. One of my favourite things to do
That’s exactly