Friday 14 September 2012

A  WORLD  WITHOUT  BOOKS…….

The novelist Colm Toibin once recounted a story about observing a Cantonese man sitting on a Kowloon footpath reading a book. The man’s face was stern with concentration, his finger tracing the line being read. At times the man’s expression would screw up in frustration at his progress. Finally, the reader looked up at the sky, his face beaming. Whether from a sudden joyous facility with the act of reading, or revelation from what was written, or delight at how the story resolved, it doesn’t matter. What mattered is he was in possession of something deliciously private – a connection between him and the writer, between the real world and that world inscribed upon the pages
What would the world be like without books? What a depressing and absurd idea. Scenes like that man reading belie the notion that modern advances pose a threat to reading as we know it There’s always talk that the latest technology signals the demise of the book. Decades ago, radio was what would do it. Then came TV. And now the Internet. The machines change, but the act has stayed the same. The simplest form of technology prevails – pages printed into a sheaf and bound between covers. There’s something reassuring about such simplicity. Especially when it lets us delve into the complexities of life.
Literature is the story of ourselves, the record of who we are, where we came from, and where we’re going. Non-fiction illuminates the world for us and fiction explains what non-fiction cannot. Through books we first travel. In those wanderings we become best acquainted with humanity through the characters we come to know more intimately than anyone else – whether we love, loathe, fear, or fawn over them
“Aren’t we loneliest, after all, when surrounded by others? But books aren’t bomb shelters, they’re bridges – through their pages we’re brought out into society, and one can posit that someone who reads is prepared for the world on a deeper level than someone who doesn’t. Though reading a book connects one with humanity, it is also the last truly private act in a world that’s become too public. As nourishment for the mind, it’s slow food in a world given over to fast food. Blogs, text messages, e-books, and the like bring topicality, portability, instant gratification, much as newspapers and magazines do. And there are the unquantifiable pleasures that books alone offer: The scent, the sound, the tactile sensation of what is a cerebral, silent, disembodied task. The sharing of a volume by lending it to a friend. The adventure of leaving a book to be found by a stranger, who will in turn partake in that private journey before passing it on again. The grandeur of a civilization evidenced through its libraries.
It is important that we work to give every person the opportunity to enjoy books as shelters, sustenance, and roads forward. Literacy and library programmes are important goals for developed and developing nations alike. To imagine a world without books is to imagine a world without thought. A world without feeling, compassion, history, or voice……………….”


Without books world will be as dark as it was several thousand years ago. The digital world can better inform you and can make you up-to-date but it can never increase your insight, intelligence and knowledge. A world without books will be a world without knowledge


EMBRACE THE WORLD OF BOOKS......
With Love
Dipali

Ref-:http://www.rdasia.com/a-world-without-books
 Article originally written by Miguel Syjuco, from the Philippines, is the author of the bestselling, multi-awarded debut novel Ilustrado.

4 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Thank u so much..i will keep myself up for new article...

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  2. Honestly saying there is no replacement of a book. I take few points out of your blog where technological transformation is being cited as a reasoning of being complex in our lives, as well it is being said the machine changes & act remains the same (I guess I understand right). Every technology has got its own charm & value even in today's world - be it listening to Radio where instead of the old wooden box it got transformed to mobile radio, a wooden shutter TV to LCD & LEDs & then now to internet interactive TVs too !! It is this technological transformation or says evolution that has taken place - but the means of use remains the same. Now-a-days there are E-Books - but still it is called 'books'. So the importance of book remains the same - it is just that technology that evolved - the process of imparting knowledge is still the same - a ‘book’. So the complexities are not there. In fact the data portability has become easy & information sharing has become wide spread through new means.
    I appreciate for a wonderful write up. Keep it up Dipali.

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