5.4.4: 1910 - heden - Reading habits/traces of users


A new phenomenon in the twentieth century, which emphasised the importance of and the appreciation for reading, was the national reading survey. The first national reading survey, in the mid1930s showed that 63% of the working population taking part in the survey regularly read books. Twenty years after that first survey, in 1955/1956, a representative sample survey carried out by the Central Bureau for Statistics (CBS) found a similar percentage to the 1930s survey. Of the people aged 12 and over, 67% read an occasional book.

The arrival of television, radio and the gramophone led to a change in reading habits. When in 1962 almost half of all households owned a television set, 17% of people's spare time was still spent on reading. In 1975, watching television had become the favourite evening pastime and 13% of leisure time was spent on reading. In the years following, the percentage of time spent on reading slowly but surely dwindled. After having gone down in the twenty years up to 1975 from 22% to 13%, the share of reading decreased to just 9% in the next 25 years. If we only consider weekday evenings and weekends, we see reading time drop from over five hours a week in 1955/56 to just under two hours in 2000, largely at the expense of book and newspaper reading. The attention given to books at this time of the week dropped from two and a half hours in 1955 to just over half an hour in 2000.

Television was the main, but not the only reason for the decline in reading. Other factors played a role as well, such as the increased number of adults with more complex and tiring day jobs, increased competition from other forms of recreation and the (all too) abundant supply of free 'reading matter'.

Despite the decline in reading, every year a considerable amount of money was still spent on books. At the end of the twentieth century, in 1999, the Dutch population bought approximately 33.5 general books (second-hand and antiquarian books not included) at an average price of 26.10 guilders (about € 11.85), resulting in a turnover of 874 million guilders (about 397 million €). Within the category of general books, literature was the largest genre with 26.3%. After the Second World War, booksellers became much more interested in translated books (mainly from English).

In the twentieth century, the interest in traces of users mainly manifested itself in collections. There was an increased interest, especially after 1926, partly as a result of the activities of Eugène Strens (1899-1980) who gathered a large ex libris collection.


author: N. van Dijk
 
 


Reading habits/traces of users



extensive reading

Definition: reading a large number of varied printed works.



functional reading

Definition: reading to collect knowledge, for the benefit of education, study or profession.



intensive reading

Definition: repeatedly reading a small quantity of printed work.



reading matter

Definition: that which is destined to be read; printed or written work (sometimes used belittlingly compared to 'literature').



supply of reading matter

Definition: total of publications offered for sale (usually counted per country, place or supplier).



reading culture

Definition: general term for all aspects involved in the degree and way in which a group of people read in a certain period, such as literacy, reading habits, literature consumption, types of readers and reading instruction.



reading habits

Definition: habits of the population or certain groups of it with regard to reading; as a subject of research it is sometimes extended to habits with respect to the buying and borrowing of books.



reading societies

Definition: 1. in the 18th century a current name for all the private organisations for whom reading was the main aim. 2. nowadays: the - usually small- organisations which have a social function besides reading.



reading circles

Definition: library of a reading circle or association that for joint account buys books, periodicals, etc., and has them circulated among its members.



reading instruction

Definition: the systematic and organised transfer of the knowledge of the alphabet, spelling and grammar to teach the skill of reading.



reading research

Definition: collective name for all forms of research into aspects of reading such as reading habits, buying and borrowing habits, reading instruction, reading skills, eliminating illiteracy, and comprehension of a text.



reading revolution

Definition: indicates a hypothesis on reading culture at the end of the 18th century, in which it is alleged that this period was characterised by a transition from intensive to extensive reading, an increase in the use of books and an extension of the readingpublic.



reading skill

Definition: proficiency in reading



reading room movement

Definition: pursuit by a group of idealists from the beginning of the twentieth century to make all sorts of books available by founding public libraries without aiming at one specific target group.



reading rooms

Definition: room in a library with seats intended for reading and study purposes; sometimes also provided with watching and listening facilities.



solitary reading

Definition: reading individually and in silence.



leisure reading

Definition: reading with the exclusive aim of spending leisure time pleasantly.



reading public

Definition: collective term for the consumers of (a certain type of) printed work.