The Reading Recession: Are We Making Ourselves Less Intelligent? (James Marriott)

The Reading Recession: Are We Making Ourselves Less Intelligent? (James Marriott)

From Radical with Amol Rajan by BBC Radio 4

April 9, 2026 · 58 min

About this episode

James Marriott discusses the impact of reading on democracy and the dangers of digital skim-reading.

This week, the columnist and writer James Marriott argues that reading is essential to the rise and fall of liberal democracy. He proposes that reading helps the spread of information, encourages critical thinking, and forces people to structure their ideas logically. But he’s concerned the shift from deep reading to digital skim-reading - driven largely by screens - is weakening our ability to think in complex, reflective ways. He suggests the decline has political consequences - that a less literate, more screen-dependent public may be more vulnerable to misinformation and less capable of meaningful democratic participation. GET IN TOUCH * WhatsApp: 0330 123 9480 * Email: radical@bbc.co.uk Episodes of Radical with Amol Rajan are released every Thursday. Your Radical Questions is released every Monday. Amol Rajan is a presenter of the Today programme on BBC Radio 4, and he’s the host of University Challenge on BBC One. Before that, Amol was media editor at the BBC and the editor of The Independent newspaper. Radical with Amol Rajan is a Today Podcast. It was made by Lewis Vickers and Rufus Gray with Anna Budd, Cordelia Hemming and Oscar Pearson. Digital production was by Gabriel…

People in this episode

Host: Amol Rajan

Guest: James Marriott

Topics covered

  • reading
  • democracy
  • critical thinking
  • digital media
  • misinformation

Keywords

  • reading
  • liberal democracy
  • critical thinking
  • digital skim-reading
  • misinformation

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: BBC Radio 4, The Independent

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