Excellent topic!! I've just finished the article and found several things to comment on.
I think Harry Potter, Twilight and Jodi Picoult are great. I've only read a couple HPs, none of Twilight series and none of Picoult...but I would no more "condemn" people who enjoy those books/writers than I would say anyone who eats avocadoes should be "condemned." I've been a bookworm since I was 6 and could get a library card. I've read (as someone who had English & French majors and a classroom teacher and librarian for 36 years) more "great literature" than most people should ever have to endure. Some of it was wonderful. Some of it was boring beyond belief. Some of it was "OK' and I got through it, though it was certainly not "memorable."
I find that at periods of my life I enjoy certain books and certain authors. For many years I was a lover of mysteries. Now they leave me bored.
I am always a bit bewildered when one genre or another is berated by others. We have different tastes in all sorts of things...furniture/food/clothing etc. Why would our choices in reading be any different? Maybe some like plain, Shaker style furniture; others are into fancy prisms, ruffles, fringes, etc. What difference does it make? Some people enjoy westerns, some sci fi, some romances, some fantasy. So what? I've heard people say that libraries shouldn't buy "name the genre"...huh? It's fine to say, "I don't like Romance" and I would say "I don't like Horror" and even maybe "I don't know why others read it" although I'm a bit puzzled by why I or someone else would decide what is "acceptable" for everyone else.
I've recently found some books/authors that others (esp.those who contributed to that Newsweek article) would call trash. Hmmm...let's see...do I care? NO. Yep, some are found in the Fiction section...and HORRORS...some by the same authors are.....gasp....gasp....classified as "Romance." HORRORS! Yep, in these stories there are problems the characters work through...be it being in a wheelchair or having made some bad decisions, etc. and they end happily ever after. Yep, there's sex and there's swearing in situations where I've heard men and women, including me, swear all my life. I haven't yet read any language that I didn't hear from students in the 36 years I was in education.
I don't watch TV, so my eyes glaze over when people start talking about "Survivor" whatever or "CSI" whatever or "Dancing with whomever" or "American Idol or Singer" or whatever that's called. I don't enjoy those. I don't enjoy horror or sci fi or fantasy or bloody/gory/torture kinds of things. I get more than my fill of the horror on my nightly news programs and in my daily newspaper. There are, for me, too many things in the world and in my extended family that aren't "happy ever after." I want time, when I'm at home, to offset the horror and the unhappiness of family members with huge health issues or family problems. If others enjoy that and enjoy reading of the "human condition," then great. Read and enjoy what you read.
What I read is nobody else's business; I don't have books on display for others to look at and decide what "it says about me." I don't care if they like what I read any more than I care if they think my love of raw cauliflower or broccoli is distasteful.
The Zadie Smith views expressed in the article left me cold and less than anxious to ever look at anything she's written. Why can't I have my own version "of the world affirmed and reinforced"?
If that gets me away from the world that is causing me to lose sleep and worrying myself into higher and higher blood pressure, why can't I read what provides me with an oasis of calm and pleasure?
"Implicit in this theory is the idea that at some point reading should stop being a pleasurable diversion, and start being work."
When that happens, and I can no longer find reading that is pleasurable but is work, is the day I stop going to my library and book stores. There are enough things in life that I have to do that are work. Reading is not and never will be one of them.
Maybe judging people by what they read is just another "measure" that people use to judge others?? Maybe we all do it...with all sorts of things...the kind of clothes we wear, the model car we drive, the furniture we buy, the looks of the house we live in, the way and color we wear our hair...maybe it's all part of the judgment of others to see if they're "worthy" of our interest? Hmmm...do we judge others more now than we did as young people or less?
My philosophy is that as long as it's legal I'll do whatever it is that I enjoy.
jane