"The real problem, on the contrary, is caused by the massive amount of information, much of it fragmented and fast-tempo," Fan says. "You are at a loss to determine what is really good."
Fan's solution: stick to the classics. "The classics are tried by time," she says. "One can't go wrong with them."
Wang Anyi, author of The Song of Everlasting Sorrow, suggests: "One should always try to read more fiction. That gives you imagination and empathy with other people and life's other contexts.
"One should read for feelings and understandings one never had before," she says. "I try to do that every day."
Yan proposed during the two sessions that a National Reading Day be established, on the day that Confucius was born.
"Reading is the only thing that will change your state of mind," says the artist who grew up with a scholar's training in arts and culture. "It's also the pillar to our traditional culture. Everyone read so avidly in the past, not for anything particular but as a way of life.
"We may have gotten very edgy and irritable from the fast-developing society and newly acquired wealth," Yan says.
"The way to get our peaceful state of mind back is by reading and going back to our traditional ways."
Fan says: "You can never set a bar of how much to read or what to read. Maybe a little guidance. But the most important thing is making the habit part of you."
Related:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|