What to Read? the Contributing Factors to the Process of Book Selection
What to Read? the Contributing Factors to the Process of Book Selection
HUMA 3639: Reading and Readers: Representation and Culture
Final Research Essay
What to Read?
The Contributing Factors to the Process of Book Selection
âNever apologize for your reading tastesâ
– Betty Rosenberg
Andrea Basta
#206728745
Professor Priscila Uppal
Wednesday March 22nd 2006
What to Read?
The Contributing Factors to the Process of Book Selection
âSir,â he said, âI would put a child into a library and let him read at his choice.â
– Dr. Johnson to Boswell
The representation of readers in society has prompted a series of questions regarding the process of book selection and the exploration of why people often choose to only read certain books as opposed to others. Throughout the course, the figure of âthe readerâ as the central artistic and cultural construct, allows the topic of choice and reading to be analysed through the essential argument of why we choose to read what we read. What stimulates our choice when deciding on a book for ourselves? Do we alter that option when deciding for someone else? Is it part of our personality or environment that influences our particular preference of genres? Are there certain literary works we find more appealing on the basis of the author? Why do we choose not to read one book, but read another two or three times? This essay will focus on the factors that contribute to the process of book selection starting from childhood and the outcome and impact of these decisions on the entirety of the readersâ life.
A preliminary brainstorming revealed that there are numerous factors that can contribute to the selection of books; personal taste in genres, the availability of literature, suggestions from others, reading environments, censorship, connections to childhood, author, book title and cover are all possible characteristics that come to influence book selection. Unfortunately, there is the assumption that all of these potential elements contribute to the action of âchoiceâ which the reader possesses. Before the understanding of choice can be analysed, readers must recollect that at one point the option to choose was not ours.
Thinking back to the initial experiences one has with reading and books it is quite common to call to mind a connection to being read to as children. âRocking me to sleep, my mother used to recite over and over the nursery rhymes from my big book of Mother Gooseâ (Carlsen, 4). âSomewhat nebulously I can recall listening to my father recite poetry to me when I was a child of two or three (Carlsen, 5). This reading situation with a family member or loved one inspires the child to enjoy the sounds of words and unleashes the desire in them to attain the ability to decipher the black markings underneath the pictures as the secret key to unlocking the story. This safe, secure and comfortable environment kindles the development of reading through the readerâs first encounter with books and âreadingâ.
Although it is the parents duty to choose literature for their children, what they do decide upon can influence, and more importantly inspire the childâs love of reading. âThe preschoolers, being conscious of reading and its rewards, want to read for themselvesâ (Carlsen, 7). This is the birth of choice. The child wants to take reading into their own hands and possess it completely. It is only natural for this emulation to occur but what is most important is the concept that these stories, poems, songs and rhymes will influence the child throughout their development. âHaving an older brother to keep me supplied, I spent much of my time browsing through comics. None of this time was spent reading them. Instead I would follow by looking at the pictures, even now I rely on pictures to guide me through magazines (Carlsen, 6). This example, although in regards to comics instead of stories or tales, reflects the power that early imposed reading material has on the rest of the readerâs life. This readerâs growth with comics has consequently formed
their reading habits into adulthood. This first experience with narrative provides the basis for preference and choice that rapidly extends into the childâs intellectual maturation.
While