TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics
February 16th, 2008

Listening as reading

By Prof. Peter Kerry Powers, English Dept. Chair, Messiah College

Prof. Powers is chair of Messiah College’s English Department. We’ll follow him as he befriends—or gives up on?—various forms of book-related technology. His bio is at the end of this post. Welcome, Pete! - D.R.

audiobookEBETH I still remember my shock and dismay a couple of years ago when I clicked on to the New York Times book page and found an advertisement of much a younger, more handsome and vaguely Mediterranean-looking young man who oozed sex appeal as he looked out at me from the screen with headphones on his ears.

“Why Read?” asked the caption.

Surely this was the demise of Western Civilization as we knew it, to say nothing of being a poor marketing strategy for a newspaper industry increasingly casting about in vain for new readers.

Nevertheless, it seems to me that audiobooks have developed a generally sexy and sophisticated cache for literary types that other shorthand ways to literature typically lack. As an English professor, I’ve been intrigued lately that a number of colleagues around and about have told me they listen to audiobooks to “keep up on their reading.” To some degree I’ve always imagined this as a slightly more sophisticated version of “I never read the book, but I watched the movie,” which has itself been about on a par with reading Sparknotes.

However, as I mentioned in a post in my Read, Write, Now blog, another colleague recently took issue with my general despairing sense that the reading of literature, at least, is on the decline, no matter the degree to which students may be now reading interactively on the web. “Yes,” she said, “but what about audiobooks?” She went on to cite the growth in sales over the past few years as evidence that interest in literature may not be waning after all.

My immediate response is a little bit like that of Scott Esposito over at Conversational reading. In a post a couple of years ago Scott responded to an advocate of audiobooks with the following:

Sorry Jim, but when you listen to a book on your iPod, you are no more reading that book than you are reading a baseball game when you listened to Vin Scully do play-by-play for the Dodgers.

It gets worse:

[Quoting Jim] But audio books, once seen as a kind of oral CliffsNotes for reading lightweights, have seduced members of a literate but busy crowd by allowing them to read while doing something else.

Well, if you’re doing something else then you’re not really reading, now are you? Listen Jim, and all other audiobookphiles out there: If I can barely wrap my little mind around Vollmann while I’m holding the book right before my face and re-reading each sentence 5 times each, how in the hell am I going to understand it if some nitwit is reading it to me while I’m brewing a cappuccino on my at-home Krups unit?

It’s not reading. It’s pretending that you give a damn about books when you really care so little about them that you’ll try to process them at the same time you’re scraping Pookie’s dog craps up off the sidewalk.

I have to grin because Scott is usually so much more polite. Nevertheless, I cite Scott at length because viscerally, in the deepest reaches of my id, I am completely with him and he said it better than I could anyway.
However, it’s worth pausing over the question of audiobooks a little further. I don’t agree with one of Scott’s respondents over at if:book, who describes listening to audiobooks as a kind of reading. But it is an experience related to reading, and so it’s probably worth parsing what kind of experience audiobooks actually provide and how that experience fits in with our understanding of what reading really is.

jesusreads As I’ve said a couple of times, I think we lose sight of distinctions by having only one word, “reading,” that covers a host of activities. I don’t buy the notion that listening can be understood as the same activity as reading, though the if:book blog rightly points out the significance of audiobooks to the visually impaired. Indeed, one of my own colleagues has a visual disability and relies on audiobooks and other audio versions of printed texts to do his work. Even beyond these understandable exceptions, however, Scott’s definition of reading above privileges a particular model of deep reading that, in actual fact, is relatively recent in book history.

Indeed, going back to the beginnings of writing and reading, what we find is that very few people read books at all. Most people listened to books/scrolls/papyri being read. The temple reader and the town crier are the original of audiobooks and podcasts. In ancient Palestine, for instance, it’s estimated that in even so bibliocentric a culture as that of the Jewish people only 5 to 15% of the population could read at all, and the reading that went on often did not occur in deep intensive reading like that which Scott and I imagine when we think about what reading really is. Instead, much of the experience of reading was through ritual occasions in which scriptures would be read aloud as a part of worship. This is why biblical writers persistently call on people to “Hear the Word.” This model of reading persists in Jewish and Christian worship today, even when large numbers of the religious population are thoroughly literate. See Issachar Ryback’s “In Shul” for an interesting image from the history of Judaism.

Indeed, in the history of writing and reading, listening to reading is more the norm than not if we merely count passing centuries. It wasn’t until the aftermath of the Reformation that the model for receiving texts became predominantly focused on the individuals intense and silent engagement with the written word of the book. In this sense, we might say that the Hebrews of antiquity weren’t bibliocentric so much as logocentric—word-centered but not necessarily book-centered.

bookwheel_2 Along these lines, the model of intense engagement—what scholars of book history call “intensive reading”—is only one historical model of how reading should occur. Many scholars in the early modern period used “book wheels” in order to have several books open in front of them at the same time. This is not exactly the same thing as multi-tasking that Scott abhors in his post, and it’s not exactly internet hypertexting, but it is clearly not the singular absorption in a text that we’ve come to associate with the word “reading.” “Reading” is not just the all-encompassing absorption that I’ve come to treasure and long for in great novels and poems, or even in great and well-written arguments. Indeed, I judge books by whether they can provide this kind of experience. Nevertheless, “Reading” is many things.

But to recognize this is not exactly the same thing as saying “so what” to the slow ascendancy of audiobooks, and the sense that books, if they are to be read at all, will be read as part of a great multi-tasking universe that we now must live in. Instead, I think we need to ask what good things have been gained by the forms of intensive reading that Scott and I and others in the cult of book lovers have come to affirm as the highest form of reading. What is lost or missing if a person or a culture becomes incapable of participating in this kind of reading.

By the same token, we should ask what kinds of things are gained by audiobooks as a form of experience, even if I don’t want to call it a form of reading. I’ve spent some time recently browsing around Librivox.org, which I’ll probably blog about more extensively in a future post. It’s fair to say that a lot of it turns absolutely wonderful literature into mush, the equivalent of listening to your eight-year-old niece play Beethoven on the violin. On the other hand, it’s fair to say that some few of the readers on that service bring poetry alive for me in a way quite different than absorption in silence with the printed page. As I suggested  the other day, I found Justin Brett’s renditions of Jabberwocky and Dover Beach, poems I mostly skim over when finding them in a book or on the web, absolutely thrilling, and I wanted to listen to everything I could possibly find that he had read.

This raises a host of interesting questions for a later day. What is “literature.” Is it somehow the thing on the page, or is it more like music, something that exists independently of its graphic representation with pen and ink (or pixel and screen). What is critical thinking and reading? I found myself thrilled by Brett’s reading, but frustrated that I couldn’t easily and in a single glance see how lines and stanzas fit together. I was, in some very real sense, at the mercy of the reader, no matter how much I loved his reading.

This raises necessary questions about the relationship between reader and listener. Could we tolerate a culture in which, like the ancient Greeks and Hebrews, reading is for the elite few while the rest of us listen or try to listen. At the mercy and good will of the literate elite—to say nothing of their abilities and deficiencies as oral interpreters of the works at hand.

More later

About Peter Kerry Powers: Pete Powers is a professor of English and chair of the English department at Messiah College.  Most of his work and publication history since graduate school at Duke University has focused on Ethnic Literatures of the United States.  Besides a bushel of articles and reviews, Pete has published one book on ethnic literature, Recalling Religions:  Resistance, Memory, and Cultural Revision in Ethnic Women’s Literature. He’s currently circulating a book manuscript on religion and masculinity in African American literature to publishers. His most recent interests have focused on the cultural status of reading in contemporary America, and he’s poking around at a new book project on this topic.  At the moment the project is still unformed enough that he can let himself be interested in about anything having to do with reading:  from reading theory, to reading and the brain, to audiobooks, to e-books, to a world with no books at all.  He blogs on these things—and anything else that comes to mind—at Read, Write, Now.

Photo: CC-licensed and taken by eBeth.

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9 Responses to “Listening as reading”

  1. What interests me in this is how different the storytelling must be to work when you hear it, from when you read it in a book at home, from when you read it on a cellphone at a cafe, subway, or doctor’s waiting room.

    I listened to the audiobook version of Carl Hiaasen’s *Skinny Dip* recently, for example. *No way* would Mr Hiaasen ever have written that first page the way he did if he were telling the tale aloud. The sentence structure is all wrong for the spoken word. It probably ‘reads’ on a page better, because it was written on a page by a writer who couldn’t ever have read the work back aloud to himself, and he wrote it to be read.

    Listening to audiobooks is not reading, no. There is an additional performance factor in telling a story out loud that can never happen in text on a page. The oral storyteller controls pace in a way the writer of printed words never can. Paragraphing really has no place in oral storytelling other than as one of the many aspects of performing the tale.

    But audiobooks also are not oral storytelling in the traditional sense. Traditionally, with his audience right before him providing him with feedback (yawns, gasps, laughter, applause, rapt silence) the oral storyteller could adjust his performance. The audio book to the oral tale is as the movie to the theatrical performance.

    But the rest of the ‘reading can’t be listening’ seems just more of the effete snobbery that shows how many writers want to kill off literature in its entirety, by keeping it as ‘pure’ as the blood of the Hapsburg line…

  2. Yes, I like how you point out that–even if there is a long history of commerce between the written and the spoken word–that’s not been the case for a while, even in literature, where it hung on a good deal longer than in other prose forms. Through at least the Victorian period poetry was still conceived of as something that ought to have an aural quality, you should “hear” the poem in your head even if you are reading silently. But that all changed to a significant degree with the modernists, where literature was clearly a form on the page.

    My guess is that most writers of books these days aren’t consciously thinking of how they will sound when read out loud–which is one reason why public readings by writers can be so deadly dull and uninteresting. It’s not just that they are poor readers of their own work–which they often are; it’s that their work was never meant to be heard in the first place.

    I wonder, though, whether the growing popularity of audiobooks will change that. Will writers start writing precisely with a view toward the fact that their books will be sold both to be read and to be heard.

  3. I usually *hate* listening to books read, because I read so much faster than people can speak. It’s like being stuck in traffic, inching along the freeway at rush hour.

    I have, however, found that proofreading at Distributed Proofreaders, which is slower than just reading, does increase my involvement with a text. Forced to slow down (by comparing text to image and then by scanning the spellcheck display) I see things that I might not have seen in my usual headlong rush through a text.

    I imagine that listening to a book might have this effect for some folks. Doesn’t for me.

  4. This is a fine exploratory essay contrasting audiobooks with conventional reading. The value that Powers discovers in the audio versions of the poems “Jabberwocky” and “Dover Beach” shows that he is open to the superior qualities of some audio presentations. Powers is not simply criticizing audiobooks although he does quote Esposito who is crudely bashing audiobooks.

    I find that the best and most intensive way for me to “read” is by integrating my audio and visual senses. I listen to an audiobook while the corresponding electronic text is displayed on an internet connected tablet computer. A gifted audio actor can provide pronunciations, accents, and cadences that are not directly represented in the plain text. The text reader must construct this information internally based on dialect knowledge that is often imperfect. Alternatively, the reader may remain oblivious to this level of perception and may engage in a quasi-symbolic cognitive processing that normalizes and strips text of audio qualities.

    Fine narrators infuse emotional colorations into text that enliven and deepen it. The text becomes a collaboration between the author and the audio narrator. If there is no external narrator then the reader himself must become an internal narrator. This does not mean that the reader must hear an internal voice; it simply means that the reader must assemble the full meaning of the text without audible clues. There is a danger that the characters may become emotionally flattened and coarsely prototypical. A Procrustean reader may coerce each character into a template that is a minor variant of the self. Of course, a poor narrator may provide a spurious, misleading, and grating audio overlayment.

    When I hear a narrator using an unfamiliar word or term then I can rapidly search for it using an internet browser by cutting and pasting from the electronic text (or simply clicking). A reference to Brancusi’s “Bird in Space” that I recently encountered motivated me to quickly and successfully search for images of the corresponding sculpture family. When the term “Vanderdecken” was used as an adjective I determined that it referred to Hendrik van der Decken who was the captain of “The Flying Dutchman”, the famous ghost ship. These terms along with the following: binnacle, cataphoresis, plantigrade, digitigrade, coaming, titivate, and bumbershoot were found in the “The Wanderer” by Fritz Leiber, a novel that won the Hugo award in Science Fiction in 1965. In each case an internet search was rewarding.

    The combination of audio with an electronic text in a connected-online framework provides the most comprehensive “literary” experience. An internet search engine is a potent analytical tool for finding supplemental explications that are absent in the audio stream and the plain text. In some cases this additional information is essential to fully understanding and enjoying the text. Of course, this is not a “shorthand” method for reading despite the presence of audio. It is slow, and I do not typically “read” this way. However, if I wish to learn from an author and attempt to improve my own writing skills I do try to read this way.

    To conclude this short note here is one last point showing the value of audio. Consider the following passage excerpted from the main article above:

    Nevertheless, it seems to me that audiobooks have developed a generally sexy and sophisticated cache for literary types that other shorthand ways to literature typically lack.

    If an audiobook version of the text above was available then the listener probably would have suggested substituting “cachet” for “cache”. The pronunciation provided by the audio would highlight the discordant syllable count.

  5. I cannot stand audiobooks.

    First, I don’t have the patience for them.

    Second, they are usually poorly done.

    Third, it’s not *reading*, dammit.

    Fourth, few authors when giving readings of their work are as compelling as the printed words.

    Go on. You sit still for the unabridged reading of Les Miserables. Suuuure.

  6. It is possible to increase the speed of an audio stream. For example the audio player WinAmp has a plug-in that allows the listener to set a faster output. The plug-in also can adjust the pitch of the output so that an audiobook narrator does not sound like a hyperventilating chipmunk. The speed can be set so that it as fast as or faster than the typical reading speed. This might reduce impatience. However, the speaker may sound oddly like John “Mightymouth” Moschitta or Fran Capo.

  7. Processing mail in a plant requires physical labor but very little concentration. The ipod has been a godsend with its assortment of audiobooks, music and podcasts. For five to six hours a day I can listen to a lecture, thrill to old radio shows or lose myself in my favorite stories. No, it’s not “reading” but it makes time fly in a job that is mentally tedious and physically draining. Besides, with noise isolating headphones, I can filter out my co-workers boom boxes.

  8. [...] This comes up now and again, so I’m just going to take the time to remind everyone that if I’ve listened to an unabridged audiobook of something, I’ve read it. You may wish to exclude me in some way from up upon your high horse, but you can’t take away from me the fact that I have read the book (morehere). Tags: Audiobooks, Audiobooks as Reading [...]

  9. [...] to not say “I want someone who doesn’t know jack about technology.” In any case, my first post over there went up last week. I may have forgotten it because I posted a version of it over here as well. [...]

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