"Can" literature cultivate or civilize? I suppose literature "can" do a great many things (good or bad). The question may be "should" it be expected to civilize... is that its purpose? And does it always do so? In another thread the question of reader's empathy arises and I find that I greatly agree with Anna Quindlen as she wrote:
Books are the means to immortality: Plato lives forever, as do Dickens, and Dr. Seuss, Soames Forsyte, Jo March, Scrooge, Anna Karenina, and Vronsky. Over and over again Heathcliffe wanders the moor searching for his Cathy. Over and over again Ahab fights the whale.Through them we experience other times, other places, other lives. We manage to become much more than our own selves. The only dead are those who grow sere and shriveled within, unable to step outside their own lives and into those of others. Ignorance is death. A closed mind is a catafalque.
This sort of empathy... the willingness to experience other lives... is perhaps something understood by readers... but one questions whether reading inspires this empathy... or the empathy inspires the desire for reading. One also doubts whether this sort of "empathy" results in a degree of civilizing of the individual.



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