Here's a Review of the Aardvark (issue #3) from One Minute Zine Reviews—a New Hampshire-based blog, paper zine, and radio show produced by DJ Frederick. If you're a fan of independently produced publications (and radio!), check it out!
The Aardvark #3
full size / 20 pp $2
I don’t know what the scientific evidence is,
however in the past two decades I have subjectively observed a decline
in not only the quantity of people who read for enjoyment or education,
but also the quality of the reading process itself. People’s attention
spans have been subverted by television and the internet, e-readers,
ipads, and an endless array of gadgetry.
The tactile and tangible experience of
reading books is a joy, one that humans have connected with for hundreds
of years. Deep reading involves attention, thought, and reflection with
minimal distraction. Deep reading is an essential ability that shapes
critical thinking and comprehension skills.
Art Vark’s newsletter / zine The Aardvark
is an affirming, literate publication that asks us to be mindful of the
relationship between reading and technology, and our own reading habits
and choices. The Aardvark is a celebration of words on paper.
Corporate CEOs like Steve Jobs (RIP) and whomever is the CEO of Amazon
would have us abandon the ship of books and paper like passengers
fleeing the Titanic. The problem is: corporate technocrats haven’t
thought about the societal implications of such a rash act. They have
only thought about billions in profits to be gleaned from digital
culture consumers.
The Aardvark moves fluently through
philosophical discussions and introduces the reader to some thought
provoking, overlooked tomes. There is more substance within its 20 pages
than I’ve read in some full length books. If you care about the act of
reading, and the future of reading, I propose immersing yourself in
these pages.
I recognize the irony of cheerleading for
the world of paper on a blog. Yet I seek balance – this blog is also a
paper zine and even a radio show. I do 95% of my reading away from a
screen, and will always choose paper over an “e-anything”. As we plunge
deeper into the digital age, paper zines like The Aardvark may become
archaic, or they may not – they may become the impetus for thoughtful
discourse that moves us in a direction of equilibrium and reason.
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