|  02-11-2013, 03:52 PM | #136 | 
| Member            Posts: 22 Karma: 560680 Join Date: Dec 2012 Device: pocketbook 622, iPad 3 and Galaxy Note 2 | 
			
			Usually in Sweden and in the most countries in Europe a BA is 3 years and a Master degree is five years. Then it can be different between some educations profession. One thing that is really different from the system in the US is that we don't have anything like college, and in Sweden we don't have any tuition fees. | 
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|  02-11-2013, 03:56 PM | #137 | 
| Member            Posts: 22 Karma: 560680 Join Date: Dec 2012 Device: pocketbook 622, iPad 3 and Galaxy Note 2 | 
			
			When I was a depessed teenager I read a lot of Kafka's work, mostly because I could relate to the alienation the main character in many of his works felt.
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|  02-11-2013, 05:05 PM | #138 | 
| Addict            Posts: 384 Karma: 1360936 Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: Quahog, RI Device: Nook, Kindle PW4, Kobo Clara | |
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|  02-11-2013, 05:30 PM | #139 | 
| Philosopher            Posts: 2,034 Karma: 18736532 Join Date: Jan 2012 Device: Kindle Paperwhite 2 gen, Kindle Fire 1st Gen, Kindle Touch | 
			
			The idea of suspending disbelief isn't new, it's as old as stories themselves. Aesop's fables have been told for over 2,000 years with few people complaining that animals didn't talk. The Labors of Hercules aren't realistic, but that hasn't stopped the story being told for thousands of years. Gulliver's Travels isn't realistic. Fantastic stories have been told for ages, but at some point, it was decided that such stories were children's stories. That didn't mean they actually were children's stories. Of course, if you don't have to like science fiction or fantasy, it's just a matter of personal preference.
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|  02-12-2013, 01:34 AM | #140 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 2,698 Karma: 4748723 Join Date: Dec 2007 Device: Kindle Paperwhite | 
			
			I got to #17 and got bored. I don't even have the attention span of a 10th grader.
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|  02-12-2013, 07:35 AM | #141 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 6,111 Karma: 34000001 Join Date: Mar 2008 Device: KPW1, KA1 | Quote: 
  I read that stuff because I *want* to have to suspend disbelief. If you can't do that, then you lack imagination. IMHO, of course. (It's something else if you can, but don't *want* to.) | |
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|  02-12-2013, 10:04 AM | #142 | |
| Addict            Posts: 239 Karma: 1664052 Join Date: Mar 2011 Device: Kindle 4NT | Quote: 
 I would say that we all have imagination, but it is not all of the same type or kind. And I would be hard pressed to say that one type or kind is better than another. | |
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|  02-15-2013, 08:18 AM | #143 | |
| Junior Member            Posts: 8 Karma: 540170 Join Date: Jan 2013 Device: none | Quote: 
  I was an English major in college, and we had to read a book a week for several semesters in a row (and none of them were short easy-read books).  And of course that meant that I read a lot and retained very little, much less remembered the names of any of them.  It's the equivalent of cramming for an exam, I suppose - you remember it for a day, maybe two, but it fades out of your long-term memory. Captain Underpants! That's some quality reading right there! I move that that becomes the hottest title on any required reading list in any academic institution.   | |
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|  02-15-2013, 10:02 AM | #144 | |
| Philosopher            Posts: 2,034 Karma: 18736532 Join Date: Jan 2012 Device: Kindle Paperwhite 2 gen, Kindle Fire 1st Gen, Kindle Touch | Quote: 
 That's one way to sell Cliff's Notes. | |
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|  02-15-2013, 10:16 AM | #145 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 2,157 Karma: 7068605 Join Date: Dec 2007 Device: Amazon Kindle Paperwhite, B&N Nook Colro | 
			
			Nope....it said I might be well read, but probably couldn't hold my own against today's 15 year olds LOL. I believe it! I mean, they're curing cancer now for crying out loud! | 
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|  02-17-2013, 07:24 PM | #146 | 
| Old Git            Posts: 958 Karma: 1840790 Join Date: Aug 2010 Location: Switzerland (mostly) Device: Two kindle PWs wifi, kindle fire, iPad3 wifi | 
			
			I had read 15, had heard of 7 and the rest never heard of. Typically, I fell down on some American stuff. But really I don't know how much such answers reveal about anyone. For example, I have a fairly dim memory of some of the stuff I read 50 or more years ago. OTOH when it came to the plays I hadn't just read them; I seen stage productions, multiple times for some of them.  Then do you get Brownie points for reading some of them in their original languages? It's a very rough test indeed of whether one is or is not well read. | 
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|  02-17-2013, 08:21 PM | #147 | 
| Fledgling Demagogue            Posts: 2,384 Karma: 31132263 Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: White Plains Device: Clara HD; Oasis 2; Aura HD; iPad Air; PRS-350; Galaxy S7. | 
			
			One problem with that list is that it incorporates books which many readers avoid deliberately.  Does that make them ill-read or knowledgeable enough to know what they won't like?   I'm not going to be interested in middlebrow books on art and culture even when they include findings which are more accurate than those in older and more idiosyncratic work. Interesting that modern bestseller writers were on the list but not the Kandinsky of Point and Line to Plane, nor Hélène Cixous, Vasari, Julia Kristeva, Roman Jakobsen, Ruskin, Pater or even Lucy Lippard. I hadn't read about six of the books and/or writers on the list: The generically titled History of Art, two books on American history (since I detest doting on the "Founding Fathers" and tactical accounts of the glorious massacre of Native Americans who were certainly here first), and two novels and a book of poetry which surely date me in terms of my ignorance of all three. Then again, there was no Tanizaki, no Leopardi, no Khlebnikov, no Proust, no Flaubert, no Aristotle, no Petronius, no Djuna Barnes, no Racine, no John Stuart Mill, no Francis Bacon, no Jules Laforgue, no Mallarme, no Gide, no Celine, no Dante, no Valery, no Tolstoy, no Kobo Abe, no J. L. Borges, no Eugene O'Neill, no Strindberg, no Murasaki Shikibu, no Cavafy, no Chaucer, no Octavio Paz, no Denise Levertov, no Tristan Corbiere, no Virginia Woolf, no Mikhail Bakhtin, no Wallace Stevens, no Anna Akhmatova, no Heidegger, no Paul Celan or Ingeborg Bachmann, no Marinetti, no Robert Desnos or Max Jacob, no Roland Barthes, no Witkacy, no Osip Mandelstom, no Juan Goytisolo, no Rilke, no Robert Lowell, no Clark Coolidge, no Mina Loy, no George Eliot, no Julio Cortazar, no Octavio Paz, no Krasznahorkai, no Cioran, no Pound, no Graves, no Jan Potocki, no Raymond Roussel, no Alfred Jarry, no Baudelaire, no Lautréamont, Gombrowicz, no Jane Bowles, no Joyce or Beckett (of course), no minor neoclassical poets, no metaphysicals but Donne (as if Crashaw, Marvell, Alabaster and Herbert weren't just as important), etc., etc. -- -- all of which tells you the Christian Science Monitor's list reflects a shop clerk's idea of literacy. Last edited by Prestidigitweeze; 02-17-2013 at 08:41 PM. Reason: Missed a few *nos* the first time. | 
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|  02-17-2013, 10:43 PM | #148 | 
| Cheese Whiz            Posts: 1,986 Karma: 11677147 Join Date: Jan 2010 Location: Springfield, Illinois Device: Kindle PW, Samsung Tab A 10.1(2019), Pixel 6a. | 
				
				Probably not. . .
			 
			
			But I think I've proven that I reason better than one!  Which attribute would you rather have when the Zombie apocalypse happens?
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|  02-18-2013, 12:31 PM | #149 | 
| Guru            Posts: 722 Karma: 2084955 Join Date: Dec 2010 Device: iPhone | 
			
			I had read most of the listed works aside from the poems, but almost none until I went to university, or even later. The only books from that selection I read in high school were To Kill a Mockingbird, Oedipus, and Macbeth, and I was older than 15 at the time. I had the pleasure of re-reading Oedipus when I was in graduate school. The understanding and appreciation I acquired dwarfed what I'd grasped as a teenager. In high school, our teacher insisted we approach the work as a series of literary devices: this is foreshadowing, that is dramatic irony. In retrospect, it was a very sterile method. | 
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|  02-18-2013, 12:58 PM | #150 | ||
| Guru            Posts: 891 Karma: 8893661 Join Date: Feb 2012 Device: Kindle | Quote: 
 Quote: 
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