The problem with 'the classics vs. BookTok’ debate

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 454

  • @karolinaal-faisal6660
    @karolinaal-faisal6660 10 месяцев назад +850

    I read literally everything, from “Jane Eyre” to “A court of thrones and roses” to Agatha Christie or “The handmaids tale” , I like all sorts of books and I can’t understand why people shame or judge other people by what they are reading, I admit a lot when I read a book that “doesn’t require thinking” but also at the same time I enjoy reading books considered as classics.
    Let’s all read what we want and enjoy what gives us joy!✨

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +65

      Love a versatile queen

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 10 месяцев назад +28

      I mean, that's great, completely agree but I guess i'm left puzzled as to why anyone _wouldn't_ do that ? Why on Earth wouldn't we all just read whatever we want to read (OK, excepting work/study related reading) ?
      It's absolutely batty to me if there are people only reading what they "should" be reading.
      (but hey, i'm "internet old" so plenty of things puzzle me these days :)

    • @MinieAnne
      @MinieAnne 10 месяцев назад +18

      I totally judge people who only read self development book 🤣 at this point you need therapy.

    • @avie4176
      @avie4176 10 месяцев назад +8

      Exactly, sometimes its better to expand your tastes and be able to appreciate more genres than one. Being a well rounded reader with an open mind is muchg better than being a stubborn and bitter one seeking attention all the time. Besides they often forget, lots of those classics were popular literature in their time.

    • @keegster7167
      @keegster7167 10 месяцев назад

      It’s a completely different experience though. I never thought I liked reading when I was a kid unlike my friends and parents but then I found Beowulf, The Great Gatsby, Vergil, Cicero, and Wittgenstein back in high school and I became obsessed with *that particular* sort of reading. Not a fan of Jane Austen myself though even though her books are considered classics oftentimes. And actually I’ve only really liked Macbeth among Shakespeare’s works so far :p

  • @BookishTexan
    @BookishTexan 10 месяцев назад +1047

    I sometimes wish that the people today who lament that “no one reads the classics” could be visited by the ghost of a literary snob from the 1830s who just repeat their lament and then listed all the books the modern reader has never heard of that were classics 200 years ago.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +63

      lmao

    • @ellajorgi2478
      @ellajorgi2478 10 месяцев назад +35

      OR that literary snob trashes like half of today's canon or has never heard of it x)

    • @ffionjames7350
      @ffionjames7350 10 месяцев назад +46

      Shakespeare was considered too common by some wealthy aristocrats in Elizabethan England

    • @scrupulousscruples
      @scrupulousscruples 7 месяцев назад +11

      For every “classic” that has been cast into obscurity by the course of time, there is Shakespeare, Homer or Apuleius to restore the balance. Some works speak to the human condition in such a powerful way that they keep resurfacing on the shores of different ages.

    • @kirstinvieira6029
      @kirstinvieira6029 6 месяцев назад +4

      I know this was written 3 months ago but im LONGING to know if youve read Don Quixote - I'm reading it right now and its so satirical and funny about this very topic. Just makes me think you'd enjoy it

  • @natasunshine1541
    @natasunshine1541 10 месяцев назад +219

    There is a literary work on this subject by Moretti called "Distant Reading". In one of the chapters he discusses the problems of the canon (which is what classic books are) and how books are become canon (long story short, there are two ways: 1) readers choose what they like, it becomes popular and canon 2) professors/critics choose worthy books and they become canon)

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +19

      Yesss!! Loved Moretti in uni (at least until the sexual harassment allegations)

  • @baticeer_
    @baticeer_ 10 месяцев назад +119

    As someone who reads a lot of classic literature, just about the only thing that bothers me about people who "don't read the classics" is when some people treat it as a *genre*. It makes me a little sad when someone tells me they don't like classics as though you can say that there's some defining commonality between, idk, Pride & Prejudice and the Odyssey, besides them both being old & influential. To me, there's something hypocritical in dismissing classics for not being diverse enough, but also refusing to read non-modern books - I think that the voices of people from history long past can offer perspectives just as different, just as valuable to that understanding of the breadth of the human condition, as the voices of those from marginalized positions in the modern day. "The past is another country," as they say.
    BUT, I don't think many people are actually doing that! As evidenced by (as you point out at the end of this video) how many people in the book community absolutely do want to explore classics and are seeking ones they can enjoy! So that's not a criticism of what you say in this vid, just a thought I have 😅 At the end of the day, I always make sure not to let my "I hope people read classics" feelings go into any feeling of superiority, instead of just the natural impulse to want books you love to be appreciated by others. Anyone can read whatever they like for enjoyment, be it "literary" or no! (And the only reason I don't read much of fluffy/escapist books is bc I get all that impulse out on fanfiction instead haha)

    • @susinok
      @susinok 4 месяца назад +1

      I would also have to prepare myself to read The Brothers Karamazov. It's a journey.

  • @Andywalker-d3w
    @Andywalker-d3w 9 месяцев назад +14

    Started watching this thinking surely there aren't THAT many people out there thinking they are superior for reading classic novels. and then I opened the comment section...

  • @silviathelibrarian3884
    @silviathelibrarian3884 10 месяцев назад +249

    I recently finished my bachelor's degree in German literature and I actually wrote my thesis on a contemporary YA novel - analyzing how tropes from "classics" were used in it
    I believe any book can be an interesting reflection of it's time - and contemporary fiction can be masterfully crafted as well🤓

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +42

      That’s such a cool thesis!! It’s always a bit sad to me when people fail to notice that books exist in dialogue with each other. Classics talking to the future and contemporary literature talking back.

    • @romy8891
      @romy8891 10 месяцев назад

      Über welches Buch hast du geschrieben?

    • @romy8891
      @romy8891 10 месяцев назад +2

      Über welches Buch hast du geschrieben?

    • @callnight1441
      @callnight1441 10 месяцев назад +9

      ​​@@romy8891 einmal fragen hätte gereicht😅

    • @stella_v_h
      @stella_v_h 10 месяцев назад +2

      Würde mich auch interessieren, worüber du geschrieben hast!

  • @studyingpeach6691
    @studyingpeach6691 10 месяцев назад +284

    You know what, this elitisim is so ingrained in our social psyche that literally last week I was telling my friend that I didn't understand why it was mostly romance or YA fantasy books that were getting really popular on the internet and my friend reminded me that most of the people reading and sharing it on TikTok are getting to experience the joy of reading without it being forced upon them for the first time. Even without arguing about the merit of classical books, most of them were written hundreds of years ago, so even the language can become a barrier of entry that intimidates new potential readers. Everybody gets to decide what their own reading journey looks like and we really shouldn't forget that classics were contemporary at some point and were judged based on reader enjoyment.

    • @Guguchina
      @Guguchina 10 месяцев назад +12

      Such good points. And it's not just the language being a barrier but also the society and culture of a past age. like for some books it helps to have an understanding of its historical context to understand points in its plot e.g. why tolstoy talks so much about farming in Anna Karenina and commentary on French women 😂 otherwise for some books, people can be pretty confused and lost. Obviously with contemporary books we don't have this barrier as we are already part of the culture in which they are written.

    • @studyingpeach6691
      @studyingpeach6691 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@Guguchina Exactly. I think people who study literature get so much more enjoyment out of classics, which are generally older books with a ton of historical context, because they get to learn about the period and historical attitudes before getting any reading done. For a fact I know I neither would have understood nor enjoyed War and Peace without the added context of Napoleon's invasion of Russia. I think some people see classics as more worthy of your time because they require high effort and yield high reward.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +29

      The language is such a big factor. Especially if you consider that, in addition to vocab (and sometimes even syntax) being slightly different from modern English, many people in the English speaking world - I'm focusing on this area because the majority of "classics" on reading lists today come from these cultures - don't actually speak English as a first language and/or speak their immigrant parents' language at home.
      Not to mention the cultural aspect, as the other commenter noted. The amount of stuff I used to have to look up online while reading 18th and 19th century lit...

    • @lampyrisnoctiluca9904
      @lampyrisnoctiluca9904 7 месяцев назад +2

      The amount of reading required from highschool students sickens me. All the assigned books are classics written long ago discussing the problems of the past your typical 15 year old does not comprehend. Be it because we are dealing with different problems now or just their brains not being developed enough for understanding such problems. All while there are many great and exciting books, both contemporary and classic that are not on the list because they are not exploring those "deep" problems 15 year olds could not understand.
      If I will ever have kids, I will tell them that there is a great conspiracy going on. They are intentionally giving kids bad books to read so they would grow up hating to read. That is there to make them less likely to eventually learn stuff from fiction books. What stuff? Recognizing the propaganda, recognising being taken advantage of, recognising facts as facts and fiction as fiction.
      So many deep philosophical concepts that are normally hard to understand could be explained so simply with a story about hero fighting his or her demons while trying to defeat the greater evil. We could learn so much from stories. There are people who don't want that. They are in charge, deciding what books are taught to kids. They are giving kids bad books claiming those are the greatest books ever written just so they would learn to hate reading.

    • @teleriferchnyfain
      @teleriferchnyfain 3 месяца назад

      Classics are by definition GOOD books!!!!! Just multiple genres.

  • @RainTheStrawberry
    @RainTheStrawberry 10 месяцев назад +612

    my LEAST FAVOURITE natural law is 'that anything young women like is cringe', like just let me enjoy my kpop and romance books in peace 😭

    • @afrinrahman5519
      @afrinrahman5519 10 месяцев назад +29

      its not just young women, its all women. like do you remember watertok where people were hating women who were recovering from bariatric surgery. there is also this trend where classic readers tend to sh!t on female romance and ya authors like sarah j mass and say that they lack creativity to write good books and are not actual writers.....like how on earth do you become a bestseller if you're not a writer.

    • @afrinrahman5519
      @afrinrahman5519 10 месяцев назад +23

      also, its better to give up and ignore them. You can never win them. when I was in high school I got bullied because apparently I wasn't a real reader cuz i couldn't understand the hype around European classics. I mostly read Indian classics cuz I'm Indian and know the historical context to enjoy those then I somehow landed into Chinese and Japanese literature in middle school and never got to explore much of English literature aside from fantasy and i got bullied, until I just stopped caring and left the book club. Now as well, the only classic authors that I've read are Jane Austen, Patrick Suskind, Oscar Wilde, Marry Shelly and Donna Tartt. I've not read all of their works, just ones I know I'd enjoy. The point of having a hobby is enjoying it, so just enjoy whatever you like as long as you're not harming anyone no one has the right to judge you.

    • @ellajorgi2478
      @ellajorgi2478 10 месяцев назад +26

      the irony is that it's exactly what keeps those things afloat. Like, would there be The Beatles without those girls? Nope.

    • @devanshisingh1643
      @devanshisingh1643 10 месяцев назад +9

      Just wanna make a slight correction, it's not a 'natural law', it's not intrinsic. It's social conditioning

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +12

      @@devanshisingh1643 I meant "natural law" sarcastically - I hope that comes across

  • @evetheseventh
    @evetheseventh 10 месяцев назад +244

    As someone who used to read nothing but classic, I find this whole classic readers fuel a dumpsters disaster. I also have a bachelor degree in English *not my first language* and reading classic wouldn't make you smarter or ELITE than others genre readers. If anything I find fantasy books more complex than classic. Don't let anyone shame you for what you read, I did that back in college hiding my YA romance books so my professor wouldn't judge me SPOILER !! she didn't !! she said their are books for everyone n we are all readers ❤

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +25

      That’s a good professor right there!

  • @Nicole-dh3um
    @Nicole-dh3um 10 месяцев назад +147

    There is nothing wrong with reading classics. There is also nothing wrong with just reading for fun as way to unwind and enjoy yourself. Life is hard and sometimes people just want a nice little escape and to have a good time. Why anyone feels the need to moan about how someone else spends their free time is beyond me.

    • @hugoblack4133
      @hugoblack4133 9 месяцев назад +2

      Some people spend their free time criticizing how others spend their free time. What do you think this vid is doing...?

    • @Nicole-dh3um
      @Nicole-dh3um 9 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@hugoblack4133 Ok, well they can knock themselves out with that I guess. I disagree that this video would be an example of that phenomenon though. Making video essay content on an aspect of contemporary culture is not the same as complaining that someone's hobby is invalid because they are doing it differently than you.

    • @hugoblack4133
      @hugoblack4133 9 месяцев назад +2

      This vid is literally a response to an article (read: “essay on an aspect of contemporary culture”) that complained that TikTok is Turning the Publishing World into Fast Fashion. It’s a complaint about a complaint. It’s the very epitome of whiny Gen Z malaise.

    • @plugshirt1762
      @plugshirt1762 4 месяца назад +1

      @@hugoblack4133you do realize you’re doing this very same thing just another layer up right?

    • @hugoblack4133
      @hugoblack4133 4 месяца назад

      @@plugshirt1762 No, because I'm not complaining. This isn't difficult.

  • @ChrisBrooks34
    @ChrisBrooks34 10 месяцев назад +44

    Why is the internet so interested in assigning moral judgement to people's hobbies?
    With every rise in a popular genre has come a wave of judgement about the degeneration of society and moral values. Guys it's not that deep.
    To be honest, the Literary Canon isn't something that is set in stone. It ebs and flows with the changing of times suddenly, people find an author who was was lost to history or even people who were very popular in their time aren't remembered 40 or 50 years later.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +6

      That’s a very good question! It runs parallel to the “kids these days” phenomenon of older generation going into moral panics over things young people do. Not to say that younger generations don’t do stupid things, but maybe give them a minute to grow out of it

  • @hysteriablack
    @hysteriablack 10 месяцев назад +118

    During my university years, I was into classical literature and used to cringe at the mere sight of romance and adult fantasy book covers. Oh, how mistaken I was. When the war in my country broke out, I started to read Ukrainian national literature to educate myself and feel more connected to my nation. However, this took a toll on my mental health and left me feeling heavy-hearted and full of grief. In an attempt to distract myself, I tried reading books purely for enjoyment and ended up discovering the world of fantasy books. They lifted my spirits and helped me feel better. Although I still wonder if escapism is the right approach, I can't deny the positive impact that these books have had on me. Now, I read books from different genres and my reading journey has become so much more interesting and diverse. I believe that having different reading experiences is powerful in developing different perspectives, understanding others, and feeling more compassionate and empathetic. There is no right or wrong when it comes to reading - whatever brings you joy, whatever interests you, and whatever you like is worth reading!

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +21

      I'm so happy to hear you've found solace, even if temporary, in something through a horrible time. Sending you all my love x

    • @lilaem
      @lilaem 10 месяцев назад +20

      Escapist reading (and writing) has been a coping and survival tactic for people in many wars during history. Lord of the rings was written during wartime and according to Tolkien escapism is not a bad thing at all, unlike some want to make it. It's one of the many reasons why literature can make our lives a little bit better.

    • @lucawasserer
      @lucawasserer 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@lilaem LOTR isn't escapism, it's Mythology, he wasn't trying to make a magical world without war, there is plenty of war in LOTR. He was trying to make a mythology for england and aparently also needed to vent his linguist and poetry skills.

    • @billcox6791
      @billcox6791 10 месяцев назад +1

      I’m sorry for your situation and glad you found some comfort in reading. This is an interesting insight about what reading is “for”.
      When I was a kid, I read for enjoyment. Now, not so much.

    • @teleriferchnyfain
      @teleriferchnyfain 3 месяца назад

      Except it is very MUCH escapism!!!! It’s a lot of other things too.

  • @Mysticfaye
    @Mysticfaye 10 месяцев назад +63

    The reason why I fell out of reading as kid is because my mom sort of pushed me to read books that she consider classics. She wanted me ti read “real literature”. My 13 year old self just wanted to read dystopian ya novels 😭

  • @collecticus
    @collecticus 10 месяцев назад +63

    Pretentious snobs can be found in many fandoms, ignoring them might be the best option, as they will see that no one cares about their gatekeeping.

  • @morgannerose7856
    @morgannerose7856 10 месяцев назад +66

    im taking a senior level course at university about fan fiction. i also absolutely love classics. the 2 can totally go together !!

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +4

      yesss I love that kind of class!

    • @rainrainyrain
      @rainrainyrain 5 месяцев назад +3

      There's cources about fanfictions???

  • @skyspersephone
    @skyspersephone 10 месяцев назад +28

    Any book that makes me feel something or encourages me to question things is a good book (in my humble opinion).
    It is a silly small town romance book, and I connect with this one character? I feel seen through them? Then it's enough for me.
    An author doesn't have to point out everything in order to criticize something.
    (comes from someone who enjoys classic lit, romance, and fantasy)

  • @ttcgr
    @ttcgr 10 месяцев назад +13

    i love classics, but i’m so thankful for my highschool literature curriculum for teaching us books are both valuable for the same reasons, and their value doesn’t directly correlate with their value.
    for instance, we read The Scarlet Letter, and our teacher was so honest with us in saying that she didn’t particularly like it, but we studied it to understand the history of american literature. we read The Epic of Gilgamesh for its historical importance within literature and the world at large, and that’s important too, even if a book isn’t super enjoyable or even good.
    Some books are masters of their storytelling method, some are revolutionary in form or method, some reflect the cultural lens of the time, and some are just really insightful and well written.
    All that to say, most classics are valuable reads, but they’re not good to go into blind, as they’re not all going to give you the same things.

  • @laindarko3591
    @laindarko3591 10 месяцев назад +28

    Your point about how people in academia don't care as much about defending the canon as random people on Twitter do has been very true in my experience. As I've been working on my English degree, my assigned reading (and watching) has included recognized classics but also a wide variety of other things based on what the professor thought would be interesting. I've studied everything in Eng classes from fairy tales to short horror films on RUclips. Maybe it's because I go to a regular public state university and it would be different at an ivy league school, but there's not nearly as much classics snobbery in literary studies as there is on the internet lol

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +13

      I can't speak for all prestigious universities of course, but my experience at Oxford was very much what you describe - most, if not all of my professors were just nerds who really wanted to include as many reference points as possible and were super keen to show how relevant and fresh older texts can be!

    • @kellymariem
      @kellymariem 2 месяца назад

      I go to a school studying specifically the Great Books program and there is definitely a snobbery here towards “non-classics”. The curriculum is decided on by committee and it very rarely changes, but when it does it’s something small. For example, we read the western canon and Francis Bacon was replaced for Martin Luther. (Granted, we don’t strictly read literature but also philosophy, theology, math, science, etc. full liberal arts spectrum) Anyway, I’ve noticed that books that aren’t classics aren’t talked about so openly. I’ve expressed my love for The Secret History, for example, and people hesitate to share their opinions because of the desire to seem more intellectual. Ive noticed the people who more openly share their opinions on outside books are generally more confident and don’t base their self esteem primarily on academia. Im afraid that’s where many people go wrong

    • @kellymariem
      @kellymariem 2 месяца назад

      I’ve had experience where classmates will say incredibly sexist things under the guise of personal experience, like “Kant (critique of pure reason) is for the boys and Middlemarch by Eliot is for the girls” which is absurd

  • @cristianamanole3110
    @cristianamanole3110 6 месяцев назад +12

    13:33 it's called "western cannon" for a reason. I'm sure there is a "Eastern cannon" too

    • @marcossidoruk8033
      @marcossidoruk8033 3 месяца назад +3

      This. Being a westerner and being amazed that the most important pieces of art in our culture were made by westerners and consequently whining about "European colonialism" or something like that is beyond stupid.
      I am genuinely amazed that someone who according to her "has two degrees on literature" can't make this basic connection.

  • @stephenconlon4411
    @stephenconlon4411 9 месяцев назад +8

    "Unsurprisingly, the majority of the books we consider 'classics' are by white Europeans" This seems a vague statement with worry marks. The question should be about who decides what is a classic. If it is the academic elite who decides (by teaching or writing about a work) then the issue should not be about the creative writers but the uncreative academics who rely on their qualifications as credentials to impress and silence others who may disagree with their pronouncements. Any decision to canonise a work needs to be defended on a variety of grounds. So must any attempt to reject a work. Status, innuendo, and popular opinion are not convincing evidence for me.

    • @teleriferchnyfain
      @teleriferchnyfain 2 месяца назад

      You mean in the English-speaking West ??? Of course they are English language books. In the East Chinese tends to be the go-to classic lit. Funny that…

  • @bluegazella5875
    @bluegazella5875 10 месяцев назад +46

    15:50 you've managed to put into words what I've been feeling for a while since I started reading!
    I didn't grow up in an environment of reading. in my country. if you chose science branch at high school (wich I did) they don't give you required readings. and I never had a relationship with books except the occasional ones I download as pdf from the internet just because I was curious about them.
    2018 was the year I considered myself officially fluent in English (I was 18). I was reading fanfiction of a certain popular boyband (it was an addiction actually lol) so the love for reading itself was already there.
    that love for reading became love of reading books around 2020.
    I saw all the girlies raving about fantasy and romance books and I was like say no more. I read the song of achilles while I didn't even know the iliad existed.
    and I devoured a book after book regularly since then. from all genres. since I didn't have a deep understanding of it or a bias towards any. I managed to read some of everything. from sci-fi to literary.
    the few classics that interested me I usually read in my native language.
    most people in the bookish community think that everyone grow up with reading the hunger games and Harry Potter and Percy Jackson. I did not. not because I didn't want to. but it's just wasn't the time for me to be a reader.
    and I hope more people understand that reading is a skill and a hobby. not a personality trait everyone could access or have the privilege of being surround by.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +11

      I also took some time to figure out how/what to read - I was born and raised in rural Romania and did not read fiction until 5th or 6th grade. And even after that, it took me a while to discover what it meant to sit down with a book, enjoy a story and then develop my own thoughts about it. It was not something I'd seen adults in my life do. I started becoming someone who reads for fun around age 16-17 and that's only because my family moved to Italy and my school had a really good library. So, yes, it's annoying to see people online make blanket statements about reading classics without acknowledging the accessibility aspect

  • @katiebird6929
    @katiebird6929 10 месяцев назад +15

    I read both TikTok romantasy books and classics 🤣🤣 I find that variety is the spice of life. When reading classics, I find new authors who I love and I really enjoy taking my time with them. On the other hand, I love reading romantasy books to break up the classics and I find they are lighter books to read as some classic books can be quite challenging/dense to read 🤓

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +4

      Variety is the spice of life, I love that

  • @ladysyllvanas
    @ladysyllvanas 7 месяцев назад +11

    I think what I hate the most is just how fantasy is becoming so mixed with romance and most of the books aren't written well in comparison to older books. It's fast paced books, and are getting worse as people's attention spans are also getting worse. I look up fantasy and I get so much YA recs. I want non-YA. Things comparable to LOTR.

    • @susinok
      @susinok 4 месяца назад +1

      It's out there, a lot of it. Find some fantasy RUclips channels for recommendations.

  • @luz9719
    @luz9719 10 месяцев назад +8

    "...a type of person that I find very interesting (derogatory)" made me spit my coffee. I love your videos and your witty comments.
    The war between trash art and classic virtue art has always been a thing. Back when I studied cinema my own professors were quick to judge any student who wanted to graduate and make Marvel movies, which I found very depressing and childlike. There's not a better or a worse way to create or consume art, that's the beauty of it.

  • @ruplayinggame3080
    @ruplayinggame3080 10 месяцев назад +39

    making myself read classics and literary fiction others considered 'smart' put me in years long reading slumps. Now I read some classics now and then and I am finding great pleasure in reading a lot of scifi classics and saying loud and proud that I hate them :)

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +6

      I love sci-fi! my undergrad dissertation was about robots in 20th century literature

    • @ruplayinggame3080
      @ruplayinggame3080 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@accordingtoalina that's so awesome! did you cover Karel Čapek's R.U.R? (I was just telling some book club people about it last night). I also love scifi, but I hate a lot of the canon, like Fahrenheit 451, Brave New World, Foundation, etc :P

  • @orsino88
    @orsino88 10 месяцев назад +7

    Also, I think that tracing the history of taste in reading is just fascinating (and not worth getting upset about!). Take a look at bestseller lists from 50 years ago, or 100, and it’s remarkable to see what seemed popular or important. Or core reading lists from the Ivy League schools in the 1950s-that will show you how much had already changed by, say, 1990. In the 19th century, “everyone” read the essays of Addison and Steele. As a historian, I see why they are important, but I also can’t picture them back in the spotlight for most readers, for many reasons.

  • @celticwelsh
    @celticwelsh 9 месяцев назад +12

    There's something to be said about how young people refuse to read anything that isn't "easy" but it offends too many people who think reading their alien fantasy smut makes them "bookworms". And it's not that reading trash is bad, it's that online book communities have become toxic cesspits where only the sterile approved trash can be read without being hounded.

    • @ariagrace8117
      @ariagrace8117 7 месяцев назад +4

      Oh believe me people who read sterile approved smut get hounded every single time in the video with people going "porn addicts" (a very grave concern if true) 💀 my mother and her grandmother's generations were enamored by bodice rippers (which would be considered the tiktok smut equivalent of those days), my mother especially, and she has a degree in Literature. People have always enjoyed reading this stuff. The problem is when people actually speak about about enjoying the "low brow literature" - there will always be people criticising them. The publishing industry, and the audience cultivated around any form of arts, has mainly seeked to promote elitism.
      I don't personally think it matters if that is all they read - of they wanted to read Tolstoy, they would have read him instead of Wattpad y/n fanfics - they stick to Wattpad y/n fanfics because that's what they enjoy. I have never seen someone talking about reading Kafka or Gaitskill on the internet getting hounded for it. If you have, I am curious what it was like.

  • @blueowl3474
    @blueowl3474 9 месяцев назад +2

    This is such a thoughtful discussion. I agree with all of this. I feel like a lot of people forget that you can just...do both. You don't have to choose between "classics" and popular booktok/romantacy stories.

  • @utopianjourney
    @utopianjourney 10 месяцев назад +45

    I read mostly classics here is why... My time is very limited, my money is as well... If I'm only able to finishing reading a book every other month i want to make sure I'm reading something that can expand my knowledge... A classic is a book that already proofed it's worth in a way... I can still read it and didn't like it, but i at least i will be able to understand the cultural references of that book... If a read a book that just came out, i can like it or not, it could be a well written book or not, it can in the future have some cultural importance or not, its a gamble and i have no time for that...

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +16

      this is also a valid way of reading and no one should tell you otherwise. I hope my video conveys this: I have no problem with people who only read classics if that's what they're into. Just with people who very loudly criticise people who choose to read other things.

    • @psyche8187
      @psyche8187 10 месяцев назад +8

      I was going to say the same thing. It’s like survival of the fittest with regard to books. Plutarch is a better bet than whatever I grab off the shelf from the book store.

    • @heckinbasedandinkpilledoct7459
      @heckinbasedandinkpilledoct7459 2 месяца назад +2

      As a somewhat new reader - I quit during my childhood due to video games - I have the same perspective. The “classics” to me are like timeless recommendations. There’s no guarantee that I will like them, but it’s more likely. Plus, YA literature seems to be heavily geared toward light, easy compositions, which isn’t bad, but could leave me with much to be desired. I’ll read the classics first, then YA literature to see which one I prefer.

  • @marieangealahmar
    @marieangealahmar 10 месяцев назад +6

    I loved and appreciated this so much!! I've also been guilty of falling victim to the idea of superiority when it comes to the classics, because this is what social media led me to believe. But I must say, it is a joy to unlearn that and allow myself to diversify the genres I read. Classics, thriller, mystery, even rom-coms. And your videos and insights has greatly helped me notice where I went wrong. I also fully agree that classics can be difficult, especially if English is NOT your first language. Like yes I'm doing English lit and speak it fluently, but at the end of the day my native tongue is Arabic, and I process any work in that language much quicker. So in that sense and by that logic, no one should be shamed for taking their time with classic or for even reading them at all. Lots of incredible books that analyse the human psyche are being published today and a lot of notable ones are translated from other languages, which stretches the mind even further. Classics are great, but their existence does not diminish that of modern phenomenal books.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад

      what a lovely comment, thank you for sharing xxx

  • @christianemden7637
    @christianemden7637 9 месяцев назад +1

    I do like the mash up definition of a classic „an old story, that stood the test of time because of it’s quality of storytelling“. I have no ambitions in literature, or background in it, but I‘m an avid lover of stories, and don’t really care who wrote it or when, if the story is good and well told, I‘m likely going to enjoy reading it.

  • @rksnj6797
    @rksnj6797 9 месяцев назад +3

    I discovered your channel by accident. I was watching another literature channel and this video came up as a suggestion and the title interested me. (thank you RUclips algorithm!) You make so many valid points. I've enjoyed reading many classics that I have reread over the years and have gotten more out of them due to a longer life experience, I've enjoyed some classics that I probably won't read again, and as many have, some classics I've read I really didn't enjoy. Thank you for this video! BTW your dog is absolutely adorable! Such a cutie!!!

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  9 месяцев назад +2

      ahh this is such a nice coincidence - thank you RUclips algorithm indeed!

  • @artemissaartstudio
    @artemissaartstudio 10 месяцев назад +13

    i for one love love love it when pop culture references the classics. i find great books to read through it. eg: clueless movie, taylor swift songs, gilmore girls, 10 things i hate about you, my fair lady, hunger games, for whom the bells tolls by metallica, etc.

    • @elishahdavis
      @elishahdavis 10 месяцев назад +3

      same!! the amount of classics i’ve read because of gilmore girls is insane as someone who primarily reads non-classical literature.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +10

      same! the whole Shakespeare and Austen adapted into teen rom-coms era of Hollywood was my favourite!!!

  • @francisedward8713
    @francisedward8713 10 месяцев назад +52

    Clearly I'm in the minority on this one in the comments, but when the most popular books of the year are things written by Colleen Hoover and Sarah J. Maas, I find it depressing. Quality literature is quality literature, period. Judging doesn't help but not acknowledging that literary fiction is eschewed in favour of fast-paced, badly written romance and fantasy novels that contribute nothing to literature or to any discussion, is a problem. This will only get worse and worse as people's attention spans inevitably get smaller and smaller. Call me snobby all you like, but one can easily see the difference between a Colleen Hoover novel and an Ali Smith, or Douglas Stuart novel, for example; I hope the pendulum does not keep swinging away from contemporary literary fiction and classics.

    • @asudebirtane8243
      @asudebirtane8243 8 месяцев назад +21

      I agree, reading whatever you like is completly valid and should not be judged but I hate the fact that shallow, fast fashion type of books have become so mainstream that whenever I enter a bookstore the first thing I see is the Booktok section. Not everyone has to read the classics or harder books to understand in general but we have come to such a point that people clearly started to lack critical thinking abilities, devoid from understanding nuance or narrative. Our attention spans are shorter already, why must we also be slaves to a "quantity over quality" type of production style in publishing?

    • @bean2046
      @bean2046 4 месяца назад +5

      You're forgetting the survivorship bias. We simply don't remember the bad books from earlier days because no one reads them anymore. Can you name a sensation novel from the top of your head? Quality literature stays literature, quantity literature comes and goes with how easy it is to publish. And if it added nothing to any discussion, neiher of you two, nor me would have written a comment about it.
      Also referring to todays publishing as fast fashion is disgusting and trivialising the horrors of fast fashion.

    • @202cardline
      @202cardline Месяц назад

      This might sound pretentious but I’m hungry and tired and promise I don’t mean anything by it: I think a lot of people who weren’t reading at all before are the ones consuming those books you mentioned. New consumers flooding the market, bolstering a mass market romance like Court of Thorns and Roses. My theory is based on anecdotal evidence of so many bootok people mentioning their rekindled or new found passion. There are still amazing writers doing the writing right now. Those who read critically are still reading.
      Critique on the publishing industry is fine. TikTok has had a hand in some truly awful books getting published with massive oversight. I think there’s valid criticism when it comes to labeling a horror/crime book as a “romance” and how that reflects on how society views sexual assault. I fear AI is getting used for cartoon book covers. I think there’s frustration from writers about getting overlooked in favor of mass market romance fantasy novels. (Although, this concept happens in almost every artistic industry) Stephanie Garber personally destroyed my life. There is nuance to the conversation that can’t be boiled down to “classics versus Colleen Hoover” in fact the conversation is just, much bigger than that.

  • @royaltyreclaimed8027
    @royaltyreclaimed8027 5 месяцев назад +2

    I'd like to add an interesting thought to this debate, though: I propose that there is such a thing as an objectively good book, that some books are objectively good, and that someone who can't appreciate an objectively good book cannot do so because they were given a poor formation on what good literature actually is.

  • @JenDunndot
    @JenDunndot 9 месяцев назад +1

    I read a lot of classics and found this discussion so interesting! it always amazes me how people with multiple degrees in literature have the ability to detach themselves from these silly ideas of "prestigious literature". It's almost like the more you study the easier it becomes to separate your sense of self from the art you consume...

  • @CaseFace981
    @CaseFace981 9 месяцев назад +2

    This is a fantastic video, and aligns perfectly with a few of my own recent feelings surrounding the discourse of classic versus modern books. I’ve had many conversations with folks who have read “classic” books and found them dreadfully boring, but that doesn’t mean the book is not deserving of its praise of being a part of literary history. On the same hand there are groups of people that read classics that view anything written in the last 25 years to just be senseless drivel that no one should even bother with, and I can’t help but feel this is just an example of many people’s close-mindedness to embracing societal change and new forms of literary art. All in all I think people should be allowed to read whatever the heck they want to read and the books snobs need to leave other people’s TBR’S alone.

  • @RafBlutaxt
    @RafBlutaxt 10 месяцев назад +6

    This is a great video and I agree wholeheartedly. I think we sometimes forget or ignore that literacy and reading fiction in particular have always been fought over as one field of social distinction. Once being able to read was no longer enough, self-styled elites started trashing the things others were reading, whether it was serialized fiction in Penny Dreadfuls in the 19th Century or the stories published in the "Pulps" in the early 20th Century. Then it went on to disparaging comics and then genre fiction and romance. And at least some authors are playing the same game. A few years ago Salman Rushdie was at great pains to point out that "fantasy" like Twilight and the Hunger Games was "trash" and that his own works wre not "fantasy" but "magical realism" for no other reason but to put himself on a supposedly higher level of cultural production. So-called "classics" or a literary canon are just more tools for that distinction, sanctioned by self-styled authorities whose qualification beyond a university degree mostly comes down to being part of the most privileged group in their respective societies which for large parts of the world still means white men. In that regard a literary canon says more about the society that created it than the quality of the books that are considered part of it.

  • @irisiulia
    @irisiulia 10 месяцев назад +11

    i think some classics definitely have their place in the "canon" (or are at least worth discussing) and dismissing them entirely is a bit silly, however pretending that you are better than others because you read these classics and just consuming them for some kind of elitist satisfaction is equally silly

  • @Cawd217
    @Cawd217 10 месяцев назад +6

    The reality is, as it concerns the Guardian article, there is no real genuine interest in truly finding a deeper truth or perspective in the human condition, only in dismantling every classic or traditional concept, until they find the supposed ugliness and contradiction inside, then inevitably turn around and offer nothing but rehashed, watered down versions of the same thing, but with a different palette or shuffling of pieces.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад

      so sad that you deleted the part of this comment that classified my video as an example of why America is falling behind China. The "American decline" argument is one of my favourite talking points lol

    • @Cawd217
      @Cawd217 10 месяцев назад +1

      ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@accordingtoalina Oh I thought that section sounded a little too hostile, and was a bit unfair to your own position/presentation, so I cut it out. It’s not that your video is directly an example of American decline, but many of the arguments you broach or bring up are. I do believe this current type of intellectual masturbation around social critique with literature, and many other topics, will open up the opportunity for positive changes, or even a whole rebirth, to come about. That is, if things continue to go the direction they have been. It’s just going to take some time.

  • @ratfishking
    @ratfishking 10 месяцев назад +7

    I don't know how much this relates to the topic but as someone who is chronically bored (anhedonia is a really cute interesting thing, isn't it? Who would've believed that boredom is a symptom of illness lol), I know that entertainment IS actually very important. Being bored CAN literally kill you, so I say, read those fucking "mindless" books if you want to, it's fine, it's healthy, it doesn't make you dumb :) (as long as it doesn't turn into substabce abuse, I guess ಥ⁠‿⁠ಥ)

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +2

      oh wow, I didn't know that was a condition! thank you for sharing x

  • @estellealbert9387
    @estellealbert9387 10 месяцев назад +2

    Loved this video and the points you made too. As someone who's completing a ma in literature, I feel like people who are fussing about the "classics" don't really know what they're talking about. Some people in my courses are doing their thesis on fanfictions, some on scifi and others on Dostoïevski or Camus and we all get along perfectly and if anything all those approaches to literature just make talking about it way more interesting. I also especially agree about the fact that classics are not immovable, they very much are and it's funny to read old texts about literature and see that what was so preached 150 years ago is completely forgotten today. Also I think reading the classics (if you like them!! It's not necessary to!!) is a great exercise in critical thinking, either because everyone says something is great but you don't think it is and you kinda make arguments in your defense in your head, or because those books are taught with a specific intent in school and reading them on your own can make you realize they're much more provocative than what you've been taught, or that a classic is generally praised (even a contemporary classic) but you find that there's a lot of things within that book that displease you etc. I don't know if I make sense but anyway, loved your video!!

  • @corycianangel6321
    @corycianangel6321 10 месяцев назад +8

    I wonder, who’s to say that the classics are limited to just English & American literature? Lots of classics from different countries are also enjoyed, from The Art of War to A Hundred Years in Solitude.

    • @ericsierra-franco7802
      @ericsierra-franco7802 4 месяца назад

      No one has ever said that the classics are limited to English and American literature. The original Classics are the literature of the Ancient Greeks and Romans. There are literary classics from many different cultures, Western and Eastern.

    • @LadyGaladrielOfLothlorien
      @LadyGaladrielOfLothlorien 2 месяца назад

      I'm from a quite small country (Georgia) and we have our own share of classics. I loved what I've read and I've wished them more popularity quite often. It's just that some are more well known than others :)

  • @s_kelli_ngton
    @s_kelli_ngton 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for the validation. I read Wuthering Heights, and though I enjoyed other works of the same period and genre and even author, I hated that book. I doubted myself when writing my review because it's so acclaimed but I had to tell myself, its okay to not enjoy a classic. It doesnt mean I'm dense or wrong it's simply my opinion.

  • @AnoushkaGhose
    @AnoushkaGhose 8 месяцев назад +5

    As someone who is a hardcore classic literature snob (Dostoevsky, Dickens etc...) even I can say that there are YA fantasies and modern romances that are actually AMAZING. Despite the story, every book is a book. And while I'll admit books like haunting adeline are problematic- I bet there were books in the pervious centuries I could say the same about.
    Also what book you read doesn't define your personality. Just because you read the Iliad it won't make you want to fight a 10 year war- the same way if you read smut it won't make you actually physically go out and do those things💀.
    You can read both Crime and punishment and Percy Jackson my loves.
    Just read what you love. Those who judge your book taste are idiots anyway- for authors put tremendous effort into their books.

  • @Yourlocal_nychotdog
    @Yourlocal_nychotdog 10 месяцев назад +72

    As a person who has so called read “classic literature” it is okay to not like them you don’t need to have a degree to enjoy them because everyone has different tastes. Reading these books does not make you better than other people and you have to understand that people like different genres.

  • @vov.7397
    @vov.7397 9 месяцев назад +6

    This video was recommended by the YT algorithm, and I HAVE OPINIONS, PEOPLE! (Well, one or two, anyway.)
    It seems to me that this topic falls under the larger category of literary vs. genre fiction. I don't know if something like The Black Prince by Iris Murdoch is considered a classic, but it's certainly a literary novel (and a really good one, Murdoch is pretty terrific) and I do have some concerns that many people are never taught how to read literary novels so they can enjoy them. When I hear a criticism of something like The Sun Also Rises that complains, "Nothing happens. All they do is sit around and drink," I know the person didn't understand the book at all, which is a terrible shame. That reader has been robbed of fully experiencing not just classics, but all books, because there can be subtext, symbolism and all the other "intellectual" things in genre fiction as well as literary fiction.
    When I was much younger (a pretentious teenager) I really valued critical essays about books I'd read. If the library had a Norton critical edition of a novel, that's the one I'd read. Those essays taught me how to read far more than any high school English teacher ever did, and I'm forever grateful to my youthful cringy pretense for showing me how to get more out of a book than I had previously.
    Classics are nothing to fear. Literary fiction is nothing to fear. People may need some tools to assist them when they are first encountered, but those tools are readily available and often enjoyable. At 19, I was ill-equipped for Dostoevsky. Reading essays by people who knew a lot more than me helped so much, and that's okay. We all need a bit of help sometimes, and the benefits of learning how to read a bit more deeply have paid off in maximizing my enjoyment of all kinds of books, and reading should, for the most part, be an enjoyable experience.

  • @alinegreen7266
    @alinegreen7266 10 месяцев назад +15

    I myself am a vivid reader of everything that is in my sight, going from Anna Karenina to The Hunger Games or a Detective Conan Manga.
    While I agree, that the language that is used in old books can be challenging (I also was fustrated more than ones) but that does not mean, all of them are complex or complicated and no one is "elite" only because they "only read classics".
    In the end, "classics" are one genre of so so many amazing other ones, it's always so crazy to me how these "classics" are put on a pedistal.
    Our time is too limited to torture ourselves through books, we don't like and enjoy!

    • @Guguchina
      @Guguchina 10 месяцев назад +2

      Yes. For people who want to read the classics I always say read a genre you like already. The classics are so diverse bc they aren't really their own genre but a group that people have decided are classics.

  • @solelyforbookishness8660
    @solelyforbookishness8660 10 месяцев назад +1

    Your book videos are always so engaging. It's good that you're questioning this, because it's so condescending to call someone a fake reader just because you don't share their taste. That tweet towards the end was also unhinged, first people get shamed for not reading classics and then they get shamed for reading them. It's 100% for appearance.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +1

      so happy you're enjoying them!! thank you for watching x

  • @nidhishshivashankar4885
    @nidhishshivashankar4885 5 месяцев назад +8

    You know what’s profoundly suspect about the “it’s just dead white men” angle? The fact that it’s used to DISMISS works. Nothing is stopping you from digging out Gilgamesh, or the Vedas, or the Tale of Genji, or whatever. You know who did? A LOT OF THOSE DEAD WHITE MEN, who were in intense competition with other dead white men to make engaging works. Pretending like cultural bias is intrinsically bad instead of just taking it as a jumping off point is what happens when you’re goal is to undermine European civilization instead of trying to view all cultures in a balanced way.

    • @nidhishshivashankar4885
      @nidhishshivashankar4885 5 месяцев назад

      *your Autocorrect

    • @ABC-sc2ip
      @ABC-sc2ip 5 месяцев назад +5

      Lumping all European writers into "whites" is also ignorant and racist, as whites come from many different countries and cultures and yet all the DEI racists want to treat Europe like a monoculture (they also do this by lumping people of colour into one group like "African or Asian"). I immediately dismiss anyone engages in this type of behaviour.

  • @sofiastj
    @sofiastj 10 месяцев назад +32

    As someone with a BA and MA in literature, I also don't understand many books considered classics lol

  • @hyenaedits3460
    @hyenaedits3460 10 месяцев назад +1

    I had to read a lot of classics in college for my creative writing degree. The way it was explained to me is that not every classic becomes a classic for the same reason. Sometimes it's the only surviving manuscript from a specific time, especially if it's very old. Sometimes it was very popular. Sometimes it speaks to the culture or mindset of a historical era. Sometimes it has some sort of universal appeal. So not every classic is accessible to a casual reader. They shouldn't be required reading for every person. There's so many and a lot of them are hard to get into if you don't understand the historical and cultural context.
    Mom gave me a classics advent calendar made by a German artist. The advent calendar just had pictures but she tracked down the actual books. Some of the books on the calendar are ones we've never heard of and a few were impossible to find in the US because they've never been printed here. Mom could only find the movie version of one that I really hope has an English sub because the entire package is in German lol. The point is that what is considered "classic" is very much tied to national and cultural identity.

  • @certifiedsorcerer3826
    @certifiedsorcerer3826 10 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for yet another nuanced and considered video! This is why I love your channel.
    I myself am someone who reads a lot of "classic literature", mostly because it's cheap and out of copyright, but also because that's genuinely where my interests lie. Yet, even with my relative familiarity and genuine interest, I am still very intimidated. I feel, as you say, that I am not allowed to dislike a book, that it is an admission of weakness or stupidity on my part. I know that this is not true. I know that art is subjective. I know I can analyze a book and articulate my criticism well; that my opinion is not "less valid" than someone who can analyze a book and articulate their praise equally well. But I feel shame all the same. I didn't study literature formally. I am not an expert. I completely understand why someone wouldn't want to deal with this additional stress in what is essentially their hobby.
    At the same time, I can't help but feel sorry for people who avoid any and all classic books. "Classic" isn't really a \*genre\*, per se. It's a label applied to any sorta old book with enough critical acclaim. Classics are so diverse! In terms of tone, style, subject, etc. There's an entire century between Jane Austen and Oscar Wilde. There's an entire ocean between James Baldwin and Tayeb Salih. It's true that the "western canon" is a problematic concept and very white-centric, but there are other canons; there's loads of non-white authors and classic literature from other cultures. It's unreasonable to expect to enjoy \*every\* classic, but I feel confident stating that there's a classic out there for everybody.
    Also, these sort of discussions frequently get tied up in an absurd dichotomy between "reading for entertainment" and "reading for enrichment". The idea is that classics are these big, boring books that responsible adults force themselves through because it's like exercise for your brain or whatever. It's a very silly sentiment that's not confined to either "side". Much like how I enjoy exercise, I enjoy intellectual stimulation. I *like* analyzing a book and thinking about its ideas deeply. That's my idea of fun. There's no dichotomy for me; they are one and the same. Reading for enrichment is entertaining and reading for entertainment is enriching.
    TL;DR: People shouldn't feel obligated to read books they don't want to, but I hope they'd keep an open mind. You might have more fun with a classic than you expect!

  • @MsKatze
    @MsKatze 10 месяцев назад +2

    I enjoy reading classics and old books in general. Not necessarily because I think they're superior to modern books, but because I find reading them so transportative. I find how our language changes to reflect the current times endlessly fascinating. All that being said, I mostly read fantasy, I even read ACOTAR, and I'm not ashamed to admit that 😁

  • @HobbiesofaMan
    @HobbiesofaMan 10 месяцев назад +2

    great video, I love that you mentioned Mike.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад

      I just found his channel a few months ago! what a gem!

  • @MilenaReads
    @MilenaReads 9 месяцев назад

    I can’t believe I only just found your channel! This was such an interesting video 🧡

  • @viniri
    @viniri 10 месяцев назад +3

    I'm a classics person. It's not because I want to feel superior; I just legitimately enjoy them. I loved some of them (Jane Austen); I hated some of them (Wuthering Heights); and I half liked others (War and Peace). Classics are not all I read. I read a lot of fantasy and some romantasy, too. It's just the genre I read most.
    On a number of occasions, I have finished a classic and thought to myself, "I can understand why this is often considered one of the greatest books of all time, but I understand why people don't want to read it." Moby Dick is a great example. Moby Dick is two books in one. It is Ahab's revenge story that is interrupted by explanations of the 19th century American whaling industry. I personally loved the whole book because I found the whaling industry explainers interesting, but if you're not interested in that type of thing, I can only imagine how frustrating it could be to read that book.
    Sometimes classics are hard. It took me five months to read War and Peace because half of the book is the interpersonal relationships of these families, which I found engaging, and the other half is Tolstoy dunking on Napoleon, which I found myself slogging through to get back to what was, in my opinion, the good part. I'm glad I read the book, but I can understand why someone wouldn't want to spend five months slogging through a book to only enjoy half of it.
    I think people should enjoy what they enjoy, and people should ignore Twitter. It's a cesspool of rage bait. Those types of accounts don't care what your opinion is. They only care about engagement on the platform, whether it's good or bad makes no difference to them. It's clicks for them either way. That's why I left it.

  • @de_hobbyhoarder50
    @de_hobbyhoarder50 10 месяцев назад +7

    I also just finished To the Lighthouse and gave it a 2. I gave her book The Voyage Out a low 4. As a classics lover and lover of books in general, I'm just starting Tobe comfortable with the fact that I just don't enjoy some books, even when everyone else does.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад

      So so important. Figuring out what you like, what you dislike and why is so much more valuable than uncritically trying to take in everything considered valuable by some arbitrary measure

  • @Lucysmom26
    @Lucysmom26 10 месяцев назад +2

    Tribe 'X Is Steeped In White Supremacy' vs Tribe 'I Am A Very Serious Intellectual Man' is like the ultimate insufferability battle. The latter gets the win, but the former puts up a great fight.

  • @billcox6791
    @billcox6791 10 месяцев назад +1

    “Classics” are just older works that are popular. Like anything, that’s due to some combination of quality, marketing, and luck.
    Are they better? Yes, to the extent good works are more likely to be popular
    Are they more worth your time? Maybe, to the extent popular works form the context for new works and older works have had more time to influence other works, but a good work should also be able to stand on its own

  • @Em__Cn
    @Em__Cn 10 месяцев назад +14

    You made so many interesting points in this video, It was such a blast to listen to!
    I too went through two literature degrees and I ended up with a tremendous inferiority complex from having a hard time reading classics. I read a few a year, have actually loved some, but others... In my case, university helped because I had professors who loved what they were teaching and made them approachable. Which is paradoxical because public opinion says they should have made it harder to enjoy the reading experience.
    Here are some of my takes (good or bad) :
    - Big book =/= serious book (Have you seen the Decameron?).
    - Sad book =/= necessarily better than comedic book (Have you seen the Decameron?).
    - Some classics are self-insert fanfiction of the author in other work or some are even basically RPF of the time (looking at you André Gide) so... Let's be critical.
    - If you criticize every modern author, why should we care about your opinion on classical authors who were disregarded in their time? (Also, mocking commercial releases on that sole basis when so many classics were written to put bread on the table...).
    - Peruse old books that are not classics if that tickles your fancy because some mediocre authors can commit absolute gems but hide them in their uninteresting work.
    - We should go back to reading passages of classics aloud with people and making it a group activity along with discussion (like it was the intent at the time some were written!) (That's why some classics in audiobook form are a must)(I shall die on that hill).
    - We have to let some classics die. Because half the "classics" quoted in our own classics have died their peaceful cultural death.
    I am so sorry, that is a lot of takes, you woke up my brain and, well, I hope it is a bit interesting...

    • @justwonder1404
      @justwonder1404 10 месяцев назад +2

      Second that, I feel like there's some underlying bias that a "serious" classic book must be huge and tragic and that's just not the case. Also, reading classics out loud sounds really fun.

    • @Em__Cn
      @Em__Cn 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@justwonder1404 That's true! Why would a good classic be remote from the mess and silliness of people. Sometimes we just want to exchange riddles and lewd jokes with our ancestors. These are classics too!
      And, I'd suggest a good tragic monologue complete with frantic acting : very cathartic. Or let's revive plays written for the sole pleasure of acting with friends!

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +2

      nooo don't apologise, I loved reading your thoughts and agree with all of this!! One of my favourite books ever is Dante's Divine Comedy and in uni we always used to joke about how the whole poem is just self-insert fanfic lol

    • @Em__Cn
      @Em__Cn 10 месяцев назад

      @accordingtoalina Oh, the Divine Comedy is my reading project for this year! With your recommendation, I can't wait to read Dante's Y/n shenanigans

  • @M1cheLLe98
    @M1cheLLe98 10 месяцев назад +2

    I love reading classic literature but sometimes it's really draining, so I started to read a fantasy book and a classic at the same time.
    Like sometimes I need books where I don't need to think and just enjoy the vibes.

  • @finding.dorii.
    @finding.dorii. 10 месяцев назад +1

    Hello ✨ I switch it up. I belong to both classics and also the YA/fantasy/romance parties. Tbh I read The Bell Jar - I felt the same like I am not allowed to say bad about it, and I marked my rating up. Then a couple of days passed and my consciousness just didn’t let me be and the rating was unfair, because I just didn’t like it. I watched videos of people who are more qualified to explain what I just read, and my opinion didn’t change. I got the book and what it was trying to say, but I just hated every minute of it so bad.

  • @asagotchi
    @asagotchi 4 месяца назад

    I've love listening to your channel like a podcast and I'm sad that I've run out of videos because I've seen them all! Subscribed ❤

  • @amusicalbookworm
    @amusicalbookworm 9 месяцев назад +1

    My higher academic experience is in the world of classical music, which is also fulllllll of gatekeeping and putting down each other’s musical taste in order to be more intellectual than someone else. I guess it just comes with the territory!

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  9 месяцев назад

      aaah sorry to hear that was your experience!

  • @zenmaster8
    @zenmaster8 7 месяцев назад

    I think people connecting modern pop culture to classics is an amazing thing. I got into dracula daily specifically because of the memes i saw of it connecting to modern pop culture and internet humor. And its ended up becoming one of my favorite books of all time from someone who is a pretty staunch modern fantasy reader who does not typically like humor. Every time ive been incestivized to read a classic while not being forced, ive ended up loving it

  • @wandahost
    @wandahost 10 месяцев назад +3

    I’ve a major in English and Portuguese literature and I used to think that if you read classics, you were a true reader. When I started to read fantasy and YA I completely changed my mind. Just because a book is a classic it automatically is a good book. I can’t stand Heart of Darkness, because it’s the most boring book I ever read.

  • @crushedmilkshake6690
    @crushedmilkshake6690 10 месяцев назад +2

    i love reading and i love reading classics, however sometimes i just want to have fun and read something simple. This is like people arguing about movies and which are better, like yes classic movies are classics for a reason but i dont always want to think too deeply about every movie and its message. sometimes i just want to have fun.

  • @jellogirl2010
    @jellogirl2010 10 месяцев назад +2

    I've read a lot of classics. My dad's rule for me growing up was two classics for every secular book I read and I've come to realize that I love classics way more than anything written today. If I dislike a book written today that's loved and praised by BookTube/BookTok, I doubt myself for disliking it and giving it less than 5 stars (my opinion). Especially in today's culture where it's frowned upon to give modern books low ratings. I don't have a literature degree, I never went to college but BookTok has definitely intimidated me when it comes to books like Fourth Wing and A Court of Thorn and Roses. I don't want to read them because I know I won't like them, and I don't want to deal with the repercussions of not enjoying it. I'm fine with people reading whatever they want, because it means reading is alive and well.. but I know what it's like to be judged for not liking smut or fantasy.

    • @TECHnicallyBlind
      @TECHnicallyBlind 25 дней назад

      I think your perspective is very interesting because it’s the complete opposite of mine. My friends are very judgmental of say ACOTAR or Fourth Wing for example, and I ended up really enjoying them (do not take this as me claiming they are peak literature please 😅 I understand that they aren’t perfect). That being said it made me doubt myself for liking the books and I gave it a lower rating than I would’ve if these influences weren’t around me.

  • @tomrojigualdo
    @tomrojigualdo 10 месяцев назад +1

    For me a lot of the points in this video resonate a lot, even as someone who reads a lot of classics and wishes more people would give them a chance. But here's the thing, when people talk about reading the classics, they mean classics that are already widely popular to an anglophone audience.
    I like a lot of Hispanic authors like Isabel Allende, Benito Perez Galdós or Vargas Llosa, and I'm pretty sure they're at least somewhat popular in their home countries. But when someone suggests they could read authors from another literary canon, I've seen the same English-speaking readers who only give attention to the same classics everyone likes on TikTok get really defensive.
    (Tbf, I'm not sure if Allende and Llosa are considered classic authors, but I surely loved their novels and they've marked me a lot! But yeah, I might have more of a "old book that's complex" definition of what is a classic)

  • @Margu22
    @Margu22 10 месяцев назад

    I always love your videos but was so pleasantly surprised to hear you mention Theo D'haen and his work! I took his class at uni and he was actually my bachelor thesis supervisor 🙏

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад +1

      Aaaaaah lucky you! I loved his work in uni

  • @jimjam3410
    @jimjam3410 10 месяцев назад +1

    I recognise Leonie’s doubt. I once read a universally loved classic and didn’t enjoy it all that much, but the prose was good, so I gave it 3/5 stars. But when I saw other people’s reviews, I started to doubt my own rating. Now, I must mention that English isn’t my first language(which is also something that needs to be taken account for by those anonymous twitter users!) and maybe I didn’t fully ‘get’ the book, but that doesn’t make my opinion invalid. It’s just so backwards to project your own subjective view of literature onto others. Let people enjoy literature in their own time, in their own way. It’s not that difficult.
    I really liked your video! You made some very good points:)

  • @landressaschiefelbein
    @landressaschiefelbein 10 месяцев назад +1

    Your dog is very adorable, love him

  • @wilderpeople845
    @wilderpeople845 7 месяцев назад

    I can really enjoy contemporary novels and find them fun to read but as a writer myself I do find it useful to read above my level and to interact with other classic literature. Not to mention that confining yourself to only one genre will make it hard to ever find creative inspiration and grow as both a consumer and a creative, and not only that but penguin classic are only a fraction of the price of contemporaries where i live.

  • @Moriarty70
    @Moriarty70 10 месяцев назад +13

    I've tried to start Joyce's Ulysses multiple times and got bogged down. Now I've grabbed the audiobook version, all 40+ hours of it. At the same time, I will chew through a Patterson book. ALL READING IS VALID READING!

    • @aldakendall4921
      @aldakendall4921 10 месяцев назад

      I read it in high school due to it being based on the Odyssey and I was wanting more of that...

    • @tylersquanto8938
      @tylersquanto8938 7 месяцев назад

      @@aldakendall4921What high school had you read James Joyce’s Ulysses?!

    • @aldakendall4921
      @aldakendall4921 7 месяцев назад

      @tylersquanto8938 a public high-school in SC. Advanced placement. I also would read all kinds of books. Still do. I got into forensic books then. John Grisham. Poe, again. The Iliad. Books similarly styled. A great one on the Trojan War, by a fantasy author. It was about Cassandra

  • @madlynx1818
    @madlynx1818 10 месяцев назад

    Great video. I would say that another aspect of a classic is its challenging aspect. Challenging in that it was written in another time outside our ordinary vernacular. The challenge engages the mind more, in parts that are used when we have to figure out a puzzle. This mental stimulation feels more rewarding. I’d wonder what your opinion is of The Prisoner Of Zenda and what you think of their decision to take it off their list just due to sales. I think Michael K V is awesome too.

  • @hueningkaj
    @hueningkaj 9 месяцев назад +1

    14:17 yes!! I once had a professor for my required comp II class and the entire curriculum was centered around Marvel movies. The next semester, I had taken an early British literature class and was surprised at how much those Marvel films had prepared me for reading “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight” or “Dream of the Rood” (albeit those are just old poems and not classic literature but I digress”. Without that Marvel class I would have had to set aside so much extra time to understand these works and would probably still be confused lol!
    I also had a professor for my literary theory class who would show us-born and raised American college kids-English drill rap in order to understand the social implications of modern England that would further our understanding of Shakespeare.
    Lines can be drawn between two medias that have seemingly nothing to do with each other and it’s about time we drop our egos surrounding classics, mostly how we absorb them in the modern era.

  • @Bonobo_JoJo
    @Bonobo_JoJo 6 месяцев назад +1

    Just read what you like and try to get as much out of what you read as you can. That’s it.
    If you wanna skim a thick book, and read a summary online only to pretend you actually read and understood a difficult book…that’s on you.
    From my experience I can tell when someone actually read a book to seem smart vs when they actually did read it. If your only opinions of a book are the mainstream ones, I doubt you actually engaged with the source material that much.
    But like I said, to each their own. Reading is good, we should all do it.

  • @OrkWarbossThrakka
    @OrkWarbossThrakka 7 месяцев назад

    I tried reading Alexander Dumas’s Count of Monte Cristo last year. I was confused by its numbering and language due to it being translated from french, and I don’t understand the culture of France. That being said I appreciate its place in my journey to learning to enjoy reading. It did show me that if a person has the joy of the genre, story, characters or culture, you do not need to have a document from an overpriced education to appreciate what you love.
    I believe that you can get as much meaning and appreciation out of Spider-Man comics, the same way people appreciate Dumas or Homer.

  • @ellajorgi2478
    @ellajorgi2478 10 месяцев назад +1

    There's YA novels in one corner of the ring, classics in the other, and non-fiction is sobbing somewhere outside in the rain 😅After getting my undergrad in literature, my fiction/non-fiction ratio shifted toward the latter, and there's so much fascinating stuff which is also highly enjoyable to read, that I do feel kinda sad that I rarely if ever see such books pop up on my feed. And of course I'm not talking about self-help or get-rich-tomorrow stuff (no shade here) but about culture, history and such. *sighs*

  • @lady_chouette
    @lady_chouette 10 месяцев назад +5

    Very interesting Video! Thank you.
    What I personally noticed is that most of those Classic Lists are very english/american centric. Every other time I caught myself going 'huh i apparently never read a classic in my life except 1984 and the lord of the rings' then i have to remind myself that im not from those countries and have read some of the german classics and that some people tend to forget that other countries have other Classics on the List.
    And i prefered to read the classics at school because I had very good language teachers in german and English who discussed the books in great detail with us. (Otherwise all of Shakespeares wordplays would have flown over my head by miles xD) That helped me a lot to appreciate them.

    • @ericsierra-franco7802
      @ericsierra-franco7802 4 месяца назад

      I love Tolkien but literary snobs do not like him in general and he is almost never on lists of "Classics". Although, of course, he certainly is.

  • @JohnSeney
    @JohnSeney 10 месяцев назад +6

    I don't know what was "privileged" about people like Dostoyevsky or Poe or Balzac who was jailed for not paying his bills or the half-black Dumas or the disabled Catholic Alexander Pope or so many others who were poor or jailbirds or minorities or too eccentric to be easily accepted in polite society. And I don't know who these people are who automatically like all classics. I can't stand Dickens, Tolstoy, and countless others who I supposedly must revere, and I will say so to anyone. For modern writers I love Sayaka Murata and Missouri Williams and others that no one has heard of so my "love of the classics" doesn't hinder me in our oh-so-wonderful modern world. Love the dog.

  • @GenWivern2
    @GenWivern2 10 месяцев назад +1

    Oh, very good indeed, thank you. You've elegantly skewered a whole bunch of my personal bugbears in under twenty minutes.

  • @Tolstoy111
    @Tolstoy111 10 месяцев назад +5

    All Arts have a Canon - especially in the West. There's nothing wrong with constantly talking about what the great achievements of a given art form are. What novels, plays, poems endure as standards of excellence. And the idea of a literary canon goes back to the Ancient world. The Greeks had a literary canon. The Hebrews etc. And while it has no bearing on whether you're a good person, it certainly reflects on what you demand. It simply takes a lot more intellectual effort, patience and knowledge to read and appreciate "Paradise Lost" than a Stephen King novel. Lastly, all that stuff about Classics being written by "able-bodied, white, rich, men" is just the same old Critical Marxism.

  • @brandon13k
    @brandon13k 10 месяцев назад

    What a zoomed out perspective. Great video!

  • @SarahJo
    @SarahJo 10 месяцев назад +1

    Personally I love Nathaniel Hawthorne's works, but if I hadn't had the particular English teacher I had in high school teach me how to read them in a way that makes sense to me, I never would have enjoyed them. Sometimes you just need someone to open the door for you, and sometimes it's okay to say that you've had a long day and just want a simple entertaining book. Cheers to both.

    • @hayleyjonasson3089
      @hayleyjonasson3089 10 месяцев назад

      High school teachers can really make or break your experience of different subjects. A bad math teacher can make you hate math or think you're terrible at it, whereas a great math teacher can make you understand how math is the language of the universe. In the same way, a bad English teacher can make you never want to touch a book after you graduate, whereas a great English teacher can inspire a lifelong love of reading. I really envy your high school English experience. I feel like I would appreciate literature (especially the classics) if I had had a really good English teacher. I'm tempted to audit a university class on Shakespeare just so that I can appreciate it more.

  • @bellaking3185
    @bellaking3185 6 месяцев назад +1

    My personal take away is this, there is a large issue concerning classism within the book community. By differentiating between classics and non-classics in the sense of it being “real” literature or not creates a new type of discrimination and “class” within the book community.

    • @ericsierra-franco7802
      @ericsierra-franco7802 4 месяца назад

      But not everything is a work of art. Not everything is literature.

  • @randallmay5895
    @randallmay5895 10 месяцев назад +8

    The problem with "the classics" is that people read them, but they don't comprehend them. The one thing most classics have in common is that they challenge people's belief systems, and no one likes having their beliefs challenged. Modern society is in it for instant gratification, and they love being told x is right and y is wrong and this book/video/movie proves their point. That way of thinking is superficial, but then again we do live in a very superficial society.

    • @Emelia39
      @Emelia39 10 месяцев назад

      Yep.

    • @ABC-sc2ip
      @ABC-sc2ip 5 месяцев назад

      This. Being human is hard and everyone is looking for the easy route.

  • @Rockwith_gyu
    @Rockwith_gyu 7 месяцев назад +1

    no bc why can’t we just read what we enjoy without having to worry about what’s the “correct” option?? I’ve been getting in to classics and many of them make me think in ways i haven’t before. That being said there are times where i need to simply turn my brain off and read. despite being classics or contemporary fiction, there will be books i love and books i hate.
    ntm the language barrier that exists with classics. one of my first classics was frankenstein, i read it for school. while the story and the concepts were so incredibly interesting, i found myself easily lost and loosing interest. they aren’t always super accessible

  • @laura_npeace
    @laura_npeace 10 месяцев назад +2

    I love how you said Jorge Luis Borges, it sounds so natural, like a latina ❤

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад

      Aaah that’s a relief! I’ve been working on my Spanish over the past couple of months 🤓

  • @rosea2350
    @rosea2350 8 месяцев назад +1

    Reading is reading; doesn’t matter if it’s a classic book, a comic book, a magazine ect. 📚

    • @ericsierra-franco7802
      @ericsierra-franco7802 4 месяца назад

      Reading more challenging material will improve reading comprehension.

  • @NoNonsense_01
    @NoNonsense_01 4 месяца назад +2

    Why are you so obsessed with race of who wrote the classics? I am a proud Indian and I adore Dostoevsky because he was the greatest psychologist to ever live. He saw through the pretense of radicals, sense of moral superiority in young men and he had the singular talent of writing the people he disagreed with, with greatest empathy (i.e. Ivan Karamazov).
    None of that has anything to do with his skin colour or nationality. I don't read modern fiction, because I have tried and found it to be mediocre.
    Besides, the classics were written to be enjoyed and discussed by common folk. The idea that only someone with literature degree can understand them is absurd. Sure, a lit degree individual can posit wild interpretations but that is not needed to read a classic!

  • @eddybedder2865
    @eddybedder2865 2 месяца назад

    Perhaps, it's the big publishing houses that pay many of the BookTube channels to discuss the classics to sell/push more books i.e. "The Classics"?

  • @felipejans74
    @felipejans74 10 месяцев назад +1

    I think a classic deals with topics that can be very important for the universal human experience, in a way that is entertainingly complex. But at the same time, once you establish the topic and understand it, then that's it. If you don't like it it's fine. Understanding is different from liking.

    • @accordingtoalina
      @accordingtoalina  10 месяцев назад

      very important distinction here! thanks for sharing xx

  • @SheriMaple
    @SheriMaple 10 месяцев назад +1

    I read classics, especially books that are less widely read. I'm curious about what thoughts were conveyed during that period. Novels helped shape the culture and are a part of the knowledge well. I'm particularly interested in works from the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries European nations and the United. States are forming national identities and empires competing against one another. In addition to writing about themselves, how are they writing about people in other cultures, or how are the voices silenced in fiction works? I'm interested in the idea of fiction being "universal."

  • @dafne-wy3ht
    @dafne-wy3ht 3 месяца назад

    Living for the Jorge Luis Borges mention ❤

  • @lizzycorvus5109
    @lizzycorvus5109 9 месяцев назад +1

    A lot of book discourse stems from people needing to establish their taste as a sign of moral superiority. This is true of classics snobs, weird YA fans who insist adult fiction is all boring and lacks diversity, etc.

  • @Griffiana
    @Griffiana 10 месяцев назад

    It's intereting that there are communities that consider certain books to be classics too. In my circles, the Old-School indie tabletop gaming community, there is a strange breadth of literature based purely on the "Appendix N" of the AD&D DMG. Some of those books are certainly out of print, but contextualise the hobby and the odd design decisions of early D&D in a way which make them a pleasure to read.

  • @ms.3537
    @ms.3537 9 месяцев назад

    I always found the problem with those lists of the classic books! My and your definition of the classic doesn't have to be the same. What someone considers to be the classic literature depends on a lot of factors that we don't talk about enough!

  • @RuthvenMurgatroyd
    @RuthvenMurgatroyd 9 месяцев назад +1

    You're just talking about 4chan /lit/ and Twitter pseuds mocking cringe TikTokers but not being any less cringe themselves. The truth is: these people are just mirror images of the same person or rather, continuous with one another. Terminally online book nerds (who may or may not actually read books). It's about time we all just accepted this.