Margaret Atwood Says Twitter, Internet Boost Literacy

Margaret Atwood Literacy

First Posted: 12/05/11 06:04 PM ET Updated: 12/06/11 09:02 AM ET

Rather than turn our noses up at Twitter, we should celebrate it and the internet as new platforms for instant communication and as drivers of literacy, says CanLit legend Margaret Atwood.


The internationally acclaimed author spoke in downtown Toronto Monday afternoon as part of nextMEDIA, a two-day conference for media professionals.


"A lot of people on Twitter are dedicated readers. Twitter is like all of the other short forms that preceded it. It's like the telegram. It's like the smoke signal. It's like writing on the washroom wall. It's like carving your name on a tree. It's a very short form and we use that very short form for very succinct purposes. There is a guy out there who is writing 140-character short stories -- I just followed him today --but that's the exception. It's sort of like haikus [and] prose," Atwood said.


Thanks to the rise of the internet and of social media, "I would say that reading, as such, has increased. And reading and writing skills have probably increased because what all this texting and so forth replaced was the telephone conversation," she continued. "People have to actually be able to read and write to use the internet, so it's a great literacy driver if kids are given the tools and the incentive to learn the skills that allow them to access it." Atwood drew laughs on Monday for a cartoon-filled slideshow presentation and was interviewed onstage by digital expert McLean Greaves, vice-president of ZoomerMEdia's interactive division and also the man who first got Atwood to join the league of high-profile authors who are avid Twitter-users.


She is approaching 7,000 tweets and has amassed more than 280,000 followers on the micro-blogging platform. Twitter even played a part in spreading word of the writer's so-called feud with Toronto Counc. Doug Ford over cuts to the city's library system over the summer.

READ: Margaret Atwood's most popular tweets. Story continues below.

"If you're reading something, even a one-sitting short story or article, you're making a commitment. You're making a lot more of a commitment because reading is in fact extremely interactive from a neurological point of view. Your brain lights up a lot. Whereas [listening to] music is more like something that happens to you, reading is something you do," Atwood said.


The Toronto-based Atwood has had a busy fall. She published her latest book, the essay collection In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination, in October and is participating in the upcoming Jennifer Baichwal-directed, National Film Board-produced documentary based on her book Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth (which she delivered as the 2008 CBC Massey Lecture).


Though best known for her more than 50 books of fiction, essays and poetry, Atwood is no stranger to technology, having co-founded the companies Syngrafii (formerly known as LongPen) and iDoLVine, which allow authors, performers and artists to remotely sign autographs for fans and make appearances at events.


Monday's chat included Atwood discussing her approach to different digital platforms and tools, set against the backdrop of diminished print sales threatening the traditional book publishing industry.


Listen to Tuesday's edition of World at Six for more coverage of Atwood's discussion.

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Rather than turn our noses up at Twitter, we should celebrate it and the internet as new platforms for instant communication and as drivers of literacy, says CanLit legend Margaret Atwood.
Rather than turn our noses up at Twitter, we should celebrate it and the internet as new platforms for instant communication and as drivers of literacy, says CanLit legend Margaret Atwood.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
djekizian
Freelancer
06:19 PM on 12/07/2011
Margaret Atwood will be the keynote speaker at the San Miguel Writers Conference in February 2012. http://sanmiguelwritersconference2012.org/
10:25 AM on 12/07/2011
Does twitter promote literacy? It depends on whom you follow.
09:43 AM on 12/07/2011
How's Dale Attwood? What's he doing these days. Last I knew, he was in a band With Paul Rielly and Paul Soul and David Spector.
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CanadaStan
Cogito ergo spud, I think, therefore I yam
03:57 PM on 12/06/2011
God she is stupid.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
djekizian
Freelancer
07:23 PM on 12/06/2011
God to CanadaStan: FAIL
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lawyer13
retired Lawyer, General and Psychiatric Nurse, wit
12:32 PM on 12/06/2011
I am a retired English lawyer who has suffered from mild dyslexia since childhood, and my spelling has much improved since I have had to do my own typing, rather than rely on a great secretary.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joshua MG
10:21 AM on 12/06/2011
Twitter is such a harmful media though. It does nothing but promote useless banter. It promotes the quoting and sourcing of such tweets as NEWS???
Yes, news outlets report on tweets now. Those are not news.
Twitter is a cancer on society. You dont give EVERYONE a platform to speak. Sure you get gems like ms atwoods short story writer, but that can just as easily be done in a "blog" or some similar format. But the majority is useless. Utterly useless.
Twitter is nothing new, just marketed. Same with facebook. To think social media is "new" is ignorant. Social media has been around since the invention of the internet.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lawyer13
retired Lawyer, General and Psychiatric Nurse, wit
12:34 PM on 12/06/2011
I can not agree with you, Twitter makes people think more effectively as they only have 140 letters and spaces to use, thus it does create more thought.