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Reading on the Decline
May 31, 2006
The secret of creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.
-Albert Einstein

Despite all the recent attention paid to literacy, Americans are reading even less than before.  According to a story carried online by MSNBC (http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5389382/)

"A report released Thursday by the National Endowment for the Arts says the number of non-reading adults increased by more than 17 million between 1992 and 2002.  Only 47 percent of American adults read “literature” (poems, plays, narrative fiction) in 2002, a drop of 7 points from a decade earlier.  Those reading any book at all in 2002 fell to 57 percent, down from 61 percent.  NEA chairman Dana Gioia, himself a poet, called the findings shocking and a reason for grave concern.  'We have a lot of functionally literate people who are no longer engaged readers,'Gioia said in an interview with The Associated Press.  'This isn’t a case of Johnny Can’t Read, but Johnny Won't Read.'

"The likely culprits, according to the report:  television, movies and the Internet.  'I think what we’re seeing is an enormous cultural shift from print media to electronic media, and the unintended consequences of that shift,' Gioia said.

"...In 1992, 72.6 million adults in the United States did not read a book.  By 2002, that figure had increased to 89.9 million, the NEA said.  The drop in reading was widespread:  among men and women, young and old, black and white, college graduates and high school dropouts.  The numbers were especially poor among adult men, of whom only 38 percent read literature, and Hispanics overall, for whom the percentage was 26.5.  The decline was especially great among the youngest people surveyed, ages 18 to 24.  Only 43 percent had read any literature in 2002, down from 53 percent in 1992."

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