In his article, “America the Illiterate”, Chris Hedges shows
his discontentment to the America government. He writes a severe situation
faced by America: there are still many illiterates in America, but the
government does not make any effective efforts on it. They only try to make a
false appearance when they enter into an election contest, when they need those
illiterate and semi-illiterate. After the campaigns, they remain powerless. The
politicians are now evading this question; they don’t help these people to
improve the existing situation; they just change the nation from a print-based
to an image- based. To be honest, I feel very shocked after I read this
article. I always think America is the most developed country in the world, and
its education is also the greatest one.
I never heard a voice to describe America from this point. Even the word
“illiterate” the author use is not the same meaning as I use.
Actually, we
always admire American politicians’ power as a speaker. We advocate that they can use very simple
words and sentence to make a speech. But from the author’s opinion, it is not
seems like a good thing. He thinks it represents and aggravates culture gap. He
thinks only the America that functions in a print-based, literate world, can
cope with complexity and has the intellectual tools to separate illusion from
truth. Americans can’t make their culture and future rely on “image”. I think
this situation can be understood, in this information generation, people become
blundering than before. Just like Carr’s worries, we now use more quick
information source, and we can hardly to sit down to read a book. It may be is
the negative part that bring by the modern technology. So even Hedges shows an example that a third
of high school graduates, along with 42 percent of college graduates, never
read a book after they finish school. Eighty percent of the families in the
United States last year did not buy a book, it never means what they read is
less than the former people. Maybe they just take another form. So in my
opinion, everything has its positive and negative parts, whether our culture
problem is too big to bear is still need time to check.
I like your point about political speech. Who said a simple message was a bad thing?
ReplyDeleteI agree with you when you argue Hedges point on purchasing books. Our reading is available in many more forms now so we do not have to acquire books to read. His statistics may also not take into account the boom of e-readers and e-books, eliminating the need to purchase a physical book, just a possibility.
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