"Sterling, Bruce - Free as Air, Free As Water, Free As Knowledge " - читать интересную книгу автора (Sterling Bruce)

Of course, there are other ways, other methods, of delimiting people's attention besides merely commercial ones. Like aesthetic and cultural means of limiting attention. Librarians used to be very big on this kind of public-spirited filtering. Conceivably, librarians could get this way again with another turn of the cultural wheel. Librarians could become very correct. Holdings must be thinned, and even in electronic media the good old *delete* key is never far from hand. Try reading what librarians used to say a hundred years ago Your ancestral librarians were really upset about popular novels. They carried on about novels in a way which would sound very familiar to Dan Quayle. Here's a gentleman named Dr. Isaac Ray in the 1870s. I quote him: "The specific doctrine I would inculcate is, that the excessive indulgence in novel- reading, which is a characteristic of our times, is chargeable with many of the mental irregularities that prevail upon us to a degree unknown at any former period." Here's the superintendent of the State of Michigan in 1869. "The state swarms with peddlers of the sensational novels of all ages, tales of piracy, murders, and love intrigues -- the yellow-covered literature of the world." Librarian James Angell in 1904: "I think it must be confessed that a great deal of the fiction which is deluging the market is the veriest trash, or worse than trash. Much
of it is positively bad in its influence. It awakens morbid passions. It deals in the most exaggerated representations of life. It is vicious in style." These worthies are talking about authors who corrupt the values of youth, authors who write about crime and lowlife, authors who drive people nuts, authors who themselves are degraded and untrustworthy and quite possibly insane. I think I know who they're talking about. Basically they're talking about *me.* Here's the President of the United States speaking at a library in 1890. "The boy who greedily devours the vicious tales of imaginary daring and blood-curdling adventure which in these days are far too accessible will have his brain filled with notions of life and standards of manliness which, if they do not make him a menace to peace and good order, will certainly not make him a useful member of society." Grover Cleveland hit the nail on the head. I feel very strongly, I feel instinctively, I feel passionately that *I* am one of those nails. Not only did I start out in libraries as that greedy devouring boy, but thanks to mindwarping science fictional yellow-covered literature, I have become a menace to Grover Cleveland's idea of peace and good order.