And the last questions from the book meme, for
littlerhymes!
16. That book you don’t dare reread for fear it won’t be the same anymore.
I am actually pretty fearless on this score. I recently (well, within the last few years) reread a couple of books that had been important to me when I was twelve or thirteen: the Babysitter’s Club book Claudia and the New
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I like your other answers - I think, even though it's fair to say I don't think I read critically in the kind of 'social justice' sense that prevails in fannish circles at the moment, I never really expected the past not to be different and either it was worth it for what else it gave me, or it wasn't. (I do have a couple of books I think I wouldn't want to re-read, but then life's short and they already played their part. Everything else, no matter how painfully I can see all that's wrong, like you, I can also see what appealed to me then and now. Even sometimes when it's just the perils of bad/hasty series writing!)
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I think that social justice criticism lends itself to the saying about "if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail." It makes people see nothing but the social justice problems in books, so they can't get anything else of value out of it even if it's there. Or they read a book that does great on certain social justice points and fail to see some really obvious problems with it in other areas, Sure, maybe such-and-such a thing is accidentally kind of promoting proto-fascism, but on the other hand the representation is so good!
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(I always think that, well-meaning as most are, it winds up as being like the princess and the pea, where all we can do is focus on the pea, no matter how many mattresses there were, just in case someone thinks we're not a real princess, but that's probably stretching it a bit far really.)
(N.B. Or so I say, to excuse all my watching of 60s & 70s TV, reading of 19th C lit and golden age detectives. Perhaps they are right and it merely shows me to be a terrible person, but I do hope not.)
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At this point I've realized that so many of my favorite childhood books are racist (my beloved Little House books!) that I just kind of expect it. The past is full of dodgy things, and I'm sure in the future people will read our current books and think "How could they not notice this was full of ____ism?"
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Do you find it hard to find things again? Or do you kind of have a sense-memory of where you wedged it into the bookcase last time you were done with it?
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However, now that I've shuffled them about for the move, I may run into some difficulties. So we'll see.
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