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This blog serves the readers of Edgar Allan Poe as a source for information and discussion. It is designed to support the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) (GO HERE) BIG READ programming. The NEA's "Reader's Guide" to the stories and poems of Edgar Allan Poe is HERE.

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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Does Literature Still Matter?


New Book Asks Whether Literature Still Matters
In era that prizes the 140-character tweet, Harvard professor ponders the value of literature

"The Use and Abuse of Literature" (Pantheon Books), by Marjorie Garber: In an age that prizes short bursts of electronic information, Harvard English professor Marjorie Garber asks whether literature still matters. As might be expected of someone who has spent her career teaching Shakespeare to undergraduates, she answers with a resounding "yes."
. . . and here’s why . . .
For Garber, of course, literature does matter. "Language does change our world," she writes. "It does make possible what we think and how we think it." Echoing an argument made by the eminent literary critic Harold Bloom, Garber claims for literature a sort of stem cell-like power to generate fresh and new imaginative experiences in those who read it.

HERE
If you’ve  been reading Poe’s stories and poems, it’s unlikely that you will deny Garber’s claims for literature.  When was the last time you received a 140 character message on Twitter that made you think as much as these twenty-one words from Poe:

“Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before.”

2 comments:

  1. Seriously, I have never recieved a tweet that made me think they way Poe does. Or any other author for that matter. We NEED literature. Every day i will stumble through some attempt to vocalize a thouhgt and all i can think is that i need more words! I need to read more diversly so as to strenghten my vocabulary so i can speak more precisely. You're not going to learn that in a 140 tweet!

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  2. "You're not going to learn that in a 140 tweet!"

    Truth spoken in ten words and 35 letters. Of course, it takes a reader to see and express such truths so succinctly.

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