i say something sarcastic in a serious tone, you will just have to guess if i'm joking or not
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literature today has, in many ways, turned into a kind of fast fashion. the aesthetic of reading often matters more than the act itself. on the surface, this seems harmless, after all, at least people are picking up books. but what’s troubling is how often these books are misread, oversimplified, or distorted.
this shift is very visible if you look back at booktok around 2021. that was the point when literature became algorithmic. books weren’t gaining popularity because of their originality, but because the algorithm decided they would. colleen hoover’s rise is one example. she became the face of contemporary romance largely because tiktok’s cycles elevated her work, not because her writing offered anything innovative. the same applies to “dark romances” like haunting adeline, which were consumed and romanticized without much critical thought. in response, more writers began writing for what sells, not for what they truly wanted to express. the result is a sharp decline in quality.
the smut driven turn in contemporary romance also speaks volumes. somewhere along the way, romance novels started treating explicit scenes as a prerequisite and marketing tool rather than letting character, intimacy, or originality drive the story. the formula repeats itself endlessly. if you’ve read one, you’ve read them all. experimentation exists, but it rarely reaches the level of visibility these books enjoy.
then comes the other end of the spectrum, performative “serious” reading. classics get misused as markers of intelligence, reduced to aesthetic props. but reading dostoevsky or any other canonical figure doesn’t automatically make someone insightful. especially if the text is stripped of nuance, and distorted to fit personal convenience. white nights, for instance, is one of dostoevsky’s most delicate works, but it has often been butchered by shallow interpretations simply because it is short and easily marketable.
the real issue here is that literature is not being allowed to breathe. it’s treated either as a prop, an accessory for identity performance, or as a product designed for the algorithm. both ends flatten the complexity of what literature is meant to be. please do not reduce literature to a prop. it deserves better. and i hope we start to see more writing that is not afraid of depth, more books that actually take their time, and more readers who want more than a consumable trend. i’ll eventually share a long, inclusive list of recommendations.
this shift is very visible if you look back at booktok around 2021. that was the point when literature became algorithmic. books weren’t gaining popularity because of their originality, but because the algorithm decided they would. colleen hoover’s rise is one example. she became the face of contemporary romance largely because tiktok’s cycles elevated her work, not because her writing offered anything innovative. the same applies to “dark romances” like haunting adeline, which were consumed and romanticized without much critical thought. in response, more writers began writing for what sells, not for what they truly wanted to express. the result is a sharp decline in quality.
the smut driven turn in contemporary romance also speaks volumes. somewhere along the way, romance novels started treating explicit scenes as a prerequisite and marketing tool rather than letting character, intimacy, or originality drive the story. the formula repeats itself endlessly. if you’ve read one, you’ve read them all. experimentation exists, but it rarely reaches the level of visibility these books enjoy.
then comes the other end of the spectrum, performative “serious” reading. classics get misused as markers of intelligence, reduced to aesthetic props. but reading dostoevsky or any other canonical figure doesn’t automatically make someone insightful. especially if the text is stripped of nuance, and distorted to fit personal convenience. white nights, for instance, is one of dostoevsky’s most delicate works, but it has often been butchered by shallow interpretations simply because it is short and easily marketable.
the real issue here is that literature is not being allowed to breathe. it’s treated either as a prop, an accessory for identity performance, or as a product designed for the algorithm. both ends flatten the complexity of what literature is meant to be. please do not reduce literature to a prop. it deserves better. and i hope we start to see more writing that is not afraid of depth, more books that actually take their time, and more readers who want more than a consumable trend. i’ll eventually share a long, inclusive list of recommendations.
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