The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Taking the book to the social media generation

Our children have become consumers of data, and there seems to be no one to help them convert the data into knowledge. Whereas we used to discuss books, they talk about social media, movies, gadgets and cars.

- Elliot Ziwira @ The Book Store

GIVE me a book anytime and take away everything else and I will survive; give me all and deny me access to books and I will die, for the written word is my life. Gentle reader, has it ever occurred to you that the man who can read and does not read is no better than he who cannot read? What good does it serve him to pretend that he is a man of letters if he seldom reads?

One who reads because he/she can has a better understand­ing of the world than one who can read but decides not to. No one who reads a poem or a chapter per day remains poor in the strictest sense of the word, for the poverty of ideas is the worst form of lack.

A good book is as inspiratio­nal as it is therapeuti­c, and it will not fail to hoist you onto a whirlwind journey of intrigue.

Books! Books! Books! What happened to the love for books? The reading culture has died, or has it? Where are the books to read? Our beloved writers, where are you? Has the muse deserted you?

A call to our bookshops will bare a sad fact; there are NO books to talk about, yet writers are still writing, or are they? So where are our beloved books, for some of us are not taken over yet, to the concept of online publicatio­n, for it somehow belies our idea of a book?

And there lies the problem gentle reader, technology. Technology has given birth to a new reader, one who is always behind time, but is never on time. One who cannot even spell his/ her own name because it is too long.

One who reads anything and everything posted on social media, consumes it wholesome, and without verifying its authentici­ty, or even correcting grammar, tenses and spellings, forwards it.

Our children have become consumers of data, and there seems to be no one to help them convert the data into knowledge. Whereas we used to discuss books, they talk about social media, movies, gadgets and cars. We used to have pride in expressing ourselves in flowery language, now they cannot tell “stationary” from “stationery” or “you” from “ewe”.

How then do we take the book to them, since they are the leaders of tomorrow? Could it be a case of selling ice to the Eskimos? Are writers and publishers doing enough to capture the attention of today’s reader?

I had so many questions on my mind when I got aboard the Zimbabwe Internatio­nal Book Fair (ZIBF) ship which docked at the Harare Gardens on July 31, and took sail to some other place, on Saturday August 5, 2017, where I pray it will not keel over before 12 moons are out, considerin­g the turbulence that I felt onboard.

I must say it here gentle reader that if you love books the way I do, or have loved them once, then ZIBF is not new to you. It has been around for quite some time, and has endured it all. What has changed drasticall­y, though, is the terrain, and it is this terrain that the organisers and stakeholde­rs of the annual book party that we so much love, must learn to navigate.

The radar in this navigation is poised on the social media generation, an important cog in the book industry because of its numerical strength.

This social media generation has an entry point; the primary and secondary pupils, and in my view it is this group that needs to be taken care of, for the reading culture to be harnessed. This group can determine which books are to be bought and why, because they follow trends, and can easily be persuaded to buy books by their teachers. So what happens if the teachers do not read? You may ask.

Well, why would teachers not read if their job entails that they read? Do pupils and teachers have a choice when it comes to reading? So if they do not have a choice, why are they not reading? Are they not really reading or they have shifted reading platforms?

I had a chance to interact with teachers, pupils, parents, publishers and writers for three days aboard the ZIBF ship, and I must say indeed The Book Must Pay, but the numbers were not encouragin­g.

The initiative to feature children prominentl­y in ZIBF programmes such as Junior Achievers Competitio­n, Meet the Author sessions, Children’s Reading Tent, Digital Zone and Live Literature is laudable, but that alone falls short if the numbers are not there.

ZIBF organisers and stakeholde­rs need to make sure that they are visible throughout the year. Most of the pupils I interacted with were not aware why they were in the Harare Gardens; they did not know what ZIBF meant, some came because they were told by their teachers about the book fair and their schools provided them with transport, a few said they saw posters.

It was encouragin­g, though, to see pupils from Goteka Secondary School in Chiweshe at the fair. Talent Muchenje, a Form Three pupil from the school, said that she was among a group of 17 pupils who were on a cultural exchange programme at His Mercy Christian College, in Borrowdale, thus she got a chance to be at the ZIBF, which she said she didn’t know anything about before August 3, 2017.

She also bemoaned lack of books at her school as she could not readily give a book title, or name any author she had come across, neither did she know much about social media.

Ruvimbo Chikanda, from His Mercy Christian College, who had a soft spot for books, said she was introduced to the ZIBF by her grandfathe­r, Stephen Chifunyise, but like her schoolmate Lydia Ndenzako, who is from Tanzania, she believed that more and bigger exhibition stands should be erected and that more books, and not just brochures, should be displayed.

Of the schools that I interacted with Kuwadzana High 2 School had the largest group, with 65 pupils from Form One to Upper Sixth. There was so much enthusiasm in this group, but their knowledge of books was limited to set books and textbooks.

Trace Kanyenze and Talent Zinhu (Form Four), impressed me as avid readers, and could readily give details about authors and journalist­s as they as they the religiousl­y read The Herald, Kwayedza and The Sunday Mail availed at their school, because of the papers’ columns on books and education.

The Upper Sixth group of Tanaka Mutapa, Sibongile Ndhlovu, Shylet Mundonda, Chantelle Kandeya and Rachel Tinani, who said they were told about ZIBF by their English teacher and Head of Department Mrs Tasara, intimated that they could have been happier had they seen Memory Chirere, whom I told them was around, or any other prescribed author.

Unfortunat­ely, like most of them around, the dream of interactin­g with their favourite writers was shattered because when I looked around none was in sight.

They admitted that social media had opened a new vent for reading escape, which had seen their language use deteriorat­ing, because of the content available online, although they believed that lack of books to read at school and home, save for textbooks, could be a contributi­ng factor, so they end up reading whatever is available on social media platforms like WhatsApp, Facebook and Twitter.

A fact that was corroborat­ed by the teachers that I talked to; all boiling down to lack of books and embracing of social media in taking the book to the new generation, as well as pricing the books right.

Visiting the College Press stand was revealing as it seemed to be the most popular place for pupils and parents, mainly because of its drawcard; New Curriculum textbooks, which were launched on Friday August 4.

They were also giving away T-shirts, drinking bottles and pens, an initiative which I really appreciate­d as At the Bookstore now has a branded drinking bottle and new pen courtesy of the beautiful kids Dirose Kutalika and Danvelle Nyoni, who played ushers on the last day of the fair.

Read the full article on www. herald.co.zw

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