
How Reading Made Us: 2. How Reading Made Our Feelings
From Understand by BBC Radio 4
March 23, 2026 · 42 min · Season 10 · Episode 2
About this episode
The episode explores the profound effects of reading on individual emotions and societal changes throughout history.
Reading seems an unremarkable skill. When we say something is as “easy as ABC”, we mean it is very easy indeed. In fact, learning to read has dramatic and irreversible consequences for people and for societies. Learning to read permanently alters your brain. It changes the emotions you experience and the way you relate to others. When a society learns to read the consequences are dramatic: wars break out, revolutions erupt and new political systems spring into being. Reading made us who we are. With time spent reading - and even reading ability - starting to nosedive, Times writer James Marriott explores how reading changed humanity, and what might happen if we stop. In this programme, James asks whether the spread of novel reading in the 18th century caused a moral revolution, whether a book played a role in the abolition of slavery, and whether the rise of reading, a solitary and slightly lonely activity, was one of the factors setting us on the path to our atomized and isolated modern society. Contributions from: - Jung Chang, author - Steven Pinker, professor of psychology at Harvard University - Sarah Maxwell, founder of Saucy Books - Robert Darnton, historian - Naomi…
People in this episode
Host: James Marriott
Guests: Jung Chang, Steven Pinker, Sarah Maxwell, Robert Darnton, Naomi Alderman, Joseph Henrich, Maryanne Wolf
Topics covered
- impact of reading
- emotional development
- historical consequences of literacy
- social isolation
- moral revolution
- abolition of slavery
- political change
Keywords
- reading
- literacy
- emotions
- society
- history
- politics
- revolution
- abolition
- isolation
Mentioned in this episode
Organizations: Harvard University, UCLA, BBC Radio 4
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