January 12, 2025

BOOKS

 Constance Grady, Vox - The question has been hurtling through think pieces, op-eds, and ominous headlines over the past few years: Have American men stopped reading? Specifically, have they stopped reading fiction? And is that why the world is so bad now?

The most recent entry in this genre came in December, when David J. Morris, an assistant professor of English at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, theorized in a New York Times op-ed that the disappearance of literary men is a contributing factor to Donald Trump’s dominant performance with the manosphere...

Reading fiction has assumed the same role as therapy in public discourse: something good for one’s mental and emotional health that we should all do in order to be better citizens, and something that men — particularly straight men — are simply choosing not to do, to the detriment of society. Essayists and critics have been hitting this note for several years, but it has acquired a new darkness since the 2024 election, when men seemed to break decisively for Trump. If men had been willing to read novels, the idea is, perhaps Kamala Harris would be preparing her inaugural address right now...

Men did appear to favor Trump by a significant margin in November, although we’re still waiting on data more concrete than exit polls to tell us how far that trend really goes. Many men do seem to have found themselves isolated in a media silo full of toxic visions of masculinity, one that probably helped radicalize them toward Trump and his acolytes this past election season. They also seem to read fewer books in general than women do, and they probably read less fiction than women as well....

The truth is that most American adults, regardless of their gender, simply do not read very many books at all.According to studies by the Pew Research Center spanning 2011 to 2021, Americans read an average of 14 books per year — likely pulled up by the number of rare super-readers taking down dozens of books — but a median of just five books per year. Generally speaking, college graduates are more likely to be book readers than people without college degrees. Adults between the ages of 18 to 29 are more likely to read books than adults over the age of 65. And women read slightly more than men do

 

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