Happy
New Year to our readers!
We begin
the year with an account of a study by Gabriela Rodella de Oliveira, an
insightful piece of research on young people reading in Brazil, with
conclusions that remind us of previous blog entries on young people reading in
other countries such as Mexico, Turkey and Spain.
We’d
like to remind you that you can send us your entry on your study, research or
experience with literature and reading. The guidelines are simply to help you
structure your entry but they can be flexible. We also remind our readers that
we’d love to receive comments on the entries or the blog in general and to know
if it is of interest and use for your own study or professional experiences.
We hope
you will continue to accompany us in 2017.
Evelyn,
Laura, Javiera and Camila
Gabriela Rodella de Oliveira has a Masters and PhD in Language and
Education from the Universidad de São Paulo (USP), Brazil. Gabriela carries out
research on the reading practices and representations of reading and literature
of Brazilian teachers and students. She participates in research groups
concerned with the relationship between reading, literature and learning, with a
special focus on children’s and young adult literature, subjects on which she
has published books and articles. She has led workshops dedicated to the
training of readers and teachers, as well as workshops on reading and the
production of texts aimed at the general public. She is also author of a
collection of Portuguese textbooks for children and adolescents. Currently,
Gabriela is professor of Reading and Production of Texts at the Humanities,
Arts and Sciences Institute of the Universidad Federal del Sur de Bahía (UFSB),
Brazil.
Aims
The aim of this doctorate
research was to describe, analyze and interpret the reading practices of adolescents
who attend school in Brazil. To do so, it was necessary to count on a sample of
participants with different profiles. The initial hypothesis states that
adolescents read, contrary to that suggested by common sense discourse of
parents and teachers which maintains that young adults are not interested in
reading.
Context and Methodology
In
order to carry out this study, I worked with first year morning school
secondary students during the second semester of 2011. Four São Paulo
institutions were selected: two private schools and two public schools, three
of them located in the capital and the other belonging to the metropolitan area
of São Paulo. Two methods of data collection were employed: one survey with
open and closed questions, which was answered by 289 students, and interviews
with 63 students, which added up to approximately five hours of recording.
Analysis
The analysis of the
data revealed the following:
1) The existence of a
strong attraction to mass culture in the actual reading practices of
adolescents from all social classes, who make a decision on their own to read
the bestsellers.
2) Tension between
students and readings selected by the school. This tension originates from the
obligation to read; from the difficulties arising from the linguistic demands and
reading comprehension; and from deadlines and the evaluation of these readings.
3) The dismissal or lack
of interest, on part of the school agents, of the readings that the students
engage in outside of the school environment.
4) The students need an
adequate reading mediation for the selection of books required by the school.
5) The socioeconomic
situation and the origin of the families of the students have an influence, in
terms of the space and time available, on the reading practices considered
legitimate within the literary field.
As an
example, below are different extracts have been selected from interviews in
which the students talk about: a) required school readings; b) what they like
in the books they choose to read; and, c) the results of a well carried-out
reading mediation.
a) “SCHOOL BOOKS ARE
BORING…”
Do you like to read?
Afonso – Only the books that I
like, but I don’t like it when the teacher orders us to read.
Dayane – They are, boring
books, like that Dom Casmurro [Machado de Assis].
Cassiana – Because they are
boring books!
Afonso - O cortiço (The Tenement)[Azevedo]
Cassiana – Wow…just Jesus!
Why is the book boring?
Cassiana – Because it is
exhausting. There is a story and you are asking yourself what is going to
happen, what is going to happen and it gets very complicated. It…depends on the
book, there are books that say it all, you become hooked, read and don’t feel
tired.
b) “TANGLE THAT TRAPS YOU”
What are the types of stories that interest
you?
Gabriel – I think more of our
time, or something like that…
Adriana – Books that have more
to do with people.
Gabriel – More related to our
age.
Danillo – I like most those of
adventure, like action books. It’s cool that, for example, in each chapter you
learn something different, you aren’t left knowing everything at once, that
they don’t even tell.
Gabriel – It’s, the same as a
novel…
Adriana – The same as a novel!
Danillo – For example, one
chapter leaves a mystery, in another it is resolved, or begins to leave it…
Adriana – A novel you even know,
you are reading it and there you are in the great final scene, then I say: it’s
going to end! It’s said and done: it ends! Only tomorrow…
c) “ESSAY ON BLINDNESS, BY
JOSÉ SARAMAGO”
Beatriz – The book, for example, is a metaphor, the
entire book, do you get it? The other books generally had a plot at least, you
know?
Lina – It was more of a
novel…
Beatriz – It is more
literal…that entire book is a metaphor in itself.
Lina – It’s more different,
it isn’t normal, no one writes a book like that. You are not going to take…The
books that people had read until now weren’t like that. They were more like a
story…
Beatriz – They had a plot. Like
in that story…for example, Nação crioula:
it is a woman who was a slave…it was all a story, it didn’t have a metaphor.
Lina – You didn’t have to
understand something behind the book.
Beatriz – He wants to do that
thing about the alienation of society. That’s what is cool about Saramago…
Lina – And then, for example,
you finish reading and think…you don’t have to think about what you read, you
have to think about what lies behind it.
Conclusions
This
study confirmed its expectations: Brazilian adolescents read. They may not read
the books proposed by school and they may not read as often as would be
desired, but in general, they do read. The students cite their favourite books,
have discussions about what they liked in the works; about the readings they do
and the books they select. Nevertheless, the ways in which school interferes
with the creation of literary readers can also be observed, making it possible
to glimpse paths toward the teaching of literary reading to today’s
adolescents.
In
their discussions, the students report difficulties in handling the Brazilian
school literary canon, in understanding “ancient languages” and texts “with a
lot of descriptions”, texts that probably answered to expectations of readers
from the beginning of the nineteenth century. The students receive those books
as mere documents of the era, perhaps useful in understanding the “historical
context,” but they do not constitute a literary reading experience. Thus, a
revision of the school literary canon is necessary to answer the – very
relevant – question posed by one of our research participants: why study these
works?
In
addition, if we keep in mind that “all reading is comparative reading [and
that] it is rare that we read what is unknown” (GOULEMOT, 2001, p. 112-113), it
seems important to establish the bases so that these comparisons can be made effectively.
Thus, constructing a reading repertoire, considering students as “active
receptors” – keeping in mind what they would like to read (ROCCO, 1981)- and
working with a “concept of teaching literature deprived of prejudices, far from
the tradition of the school and open to the cultural reality of our time”
(VIEIRA, 1988, p. 2), seems to be an alternative for young adults to reflect on
what they read and to be able to draw parallels with the new readings we want
them to do.
Thus,
we believe it is possible, through a mediation that includes a revision of the
selection of texts worked on in class and of consideration of the works that
adolescents opt to read on their own account, to get students from the
different schools and social levels to develop the qualities necessary to
become literary readers.
Full text: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-31012014-121057/pt-br.php
References included in the text
The analysis of data
related to what
these young people chose to read in their own time and what keeps them away
from reading literary school classics was carried out in light of the concepts of
social psychology (S. Moscovici); the history of book and reading culture (R.
Chartier); reading sociology (P. Bourdieu, B. Lahire, C. Baudelot, M. Cartier e
C. Detrez); literary criticism (H. R. Jauss, W. Iser, U. Eco, S. Fish, J. P.
Paes, M. Sodré e S. Reimão) and research on the teaching of literature and
literary readings (J. M. Goulemot, A. Rouxel, V. Jouve, M. Butlen, M. T. F.
Rocco, A. Vieira, C. Leahy-Dios, W. R. Cereja, M. Z. Versiani Machado, M. P.
Pinheiro, N. L. Rezende, among others).
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