Social media, brain rot and the slow death of reading
My favourite non-fiction book this year — and an excellent antidote to brain rot — is Edwin Frank’s Stranger than Fiction: Lives of the Twentieth-Century Novel . Covering 33 books with a bibliography of further suggested reading, it’s both a way to exercise deep reading and a portal for re-engaging with some of the greatest works in history.
Social media, brain rot and the slow death of reading
The Oxford University Press word of 2024 was “brain rot”— meaning both the “low-quality, low-value content” found online and the intellectual deterioration from its overconsumption. First recorded in Henry David Thoreau’s 1854 book Walden , this year’s uptick in usage is (ironically) attributed to references in TikTok videos.