|
|
I will not say the future of writing that Bob Stein sees before us is
wrong; but I will say that it makes me very very uncomfortable.
Stein is the head of an organization called Institute for the Future
of the Book. The institute is made up of heavy thinkers such as Mr. Stein,
who see reading evolving from a solitary pursuit into a communal, electronically
networked activity. In their future, communication between reader and
writer will be so quick and easy that the line between them will fade
away. Readers will be able to comment on work before it is finished,
thus changing the final product.
But the final product doesn't actually matter much to Mr. Stein. He predicts
that work appearing on line will be so easy to pirate that anybody will
be able to read anything for free. The only way to make a literary living
will be to host discussions about the work, not to sell the work itself.
It seems to me that much of what he proposes comes from the same place
as the idea that anyone can write well and that all information should
be free. Which itself grew out of the idea, so popular in the 1980s,
that there are no winners or losers but only players — that everybody
who plays is equal to everybody else.
Though Stein may be right about the results of pirated material (I like
to think a solution will be found even for this) I disagree with almost
everything else he says.
I agree that writing is communication between a writer and a reader,
but it seems to me that the communication is at its best when it flows
only one way, from writer to reader. A writer is a professional who in
theory has spent a lot of time thinking about his subject whether it
be fiction or non. We, or at least I, purchase a book to learn what that
particular writer is thinking, to be guided by his expert hand through
a maze of character, situation, and style. If I have any thoughts on
the writer's work I may certainly contact him if I'm so inclined, but
now we're talking about MY thoughts, not the thoughts of the person who
wrote the book. I certainly have no interest in changing his book as
he wrote it.
In my life reading is a joyously solitary activity, a direct mind meld
between the writer and me. I might enjoy discussing the work with other
readers, but I don't want them changing the work. Once a writer believes
a work is done and it appears, either electronically or on paper, it
should not change, and certainly it should not change because the readers
have an opinion or a theory. Will Captain Ahab find Moby-Dick? Will Huck
and Jim get away? Depends on which version you read. I find this whole
idea of constant rewrites to satisfy the ever changing demographic of
readers disturbing and wrong headed.
If reading and writing become social activities, both activities become
something else. And I guess that's fine. I'm all up for new art forms.
Certainly some people will enjoy this sort of thing. But please call
it something else. And leave my old art form alone.
|