The Herald (Zimbabwe)

The internet and Africa’s reading culture

- Amara Onuh Correspond­ent

Africans have not always been the reading type. The past literate Africans embraced it because it was the latest and newest solution to a successful life; something you need to do if you wanted to be as smart and intelligen­t as the white men.

WHAT do Africans do on the internet? Reading, chatting or surfing? For chronic readers, reading just got easier and more interestin­g because of the wide range of materials to obtain informatio­n from but for the other group, there is still room to make it more fun.

Reading culture is the idea of developing the habit and patience to read. Reading is the only known way to appreciate literacy and literary works. Somehow, with the invention of the internet, Africans seem to be reading lesser than they did when it was just books. Generally speaking, there has been a global concern about the decline in the reading culture. With the advent of many social networks, the ironic truth is that people may still be reading but the worry is the quality and relevance of what they read.

Just like there are various forms of engaging pastimes on the internet, so also are there interestin­g literary pieces worth reading but the modern-day youth would rather choose something in entertainm­ent news and celebrity gossip probably because they are light weighted.

So, what does the internet serve the most for the African audience? What sort of materials appeal to them? Do they really have the patience for reading literary pieces? Internet use in Africa is largely increasing but just how much has it promoted Africa’s reading culture? Is it a matter of language, will Africans read more if there were more materials written in native languages? Seems there is quite a lot to be considered when the issue of reading comes up, orientatio­n is one (culture), availabili­ty of materials, interests and trend.

The internet actually has the potential of making the reading habit a lot easier, trendier maybe. As much as there are concerns about the quality and authentici­ty of the materials on the internet, there are greater chances that the much internet users there are in Africa could develop the love and passion for reading. You know what they say, it takes constant repetition to make or break a habit.

A chronic reader reads any and everything, from the pages of a book to the internet to any readable thing on a billboard or a moving vehicle. Some people just love reading, it comes naturally to them but some other persons might be enticed to do so because of the trendy euphoria that comes with technology or a matter of necessity. With the internet, the average African reads but only out of interest, curiosity perhaps (though in a very little percentage). In any case, as the use of internet rises in Africa, owing to the growth in mobile technology, some spend quite a huge amount of time on the internet, busy for one purpose or the other but not always reading in the actual sense.

Africans have not always been the reading type. The past literate Africans embraced it because it was the latest and newest solution to a successful life; something you need to do if you wanted to be as smart and intelligen­t as the white men. A proof that reading is not in our culture lies in our pattern of cultural preservati­on - participat­ion and storytelli­ng; that was how we preserved historical experience­s. - AnswersAfr­ica.com

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