The Civilization of Illiteracy by Mihai Nadin

(7 User reviews)   1659
By Donald Ward Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Adventure
Nadin, Mihai, 1938- Nadin, Mihai, 1938-
English
Hey, have you ever scrolled through TikTok while watching Netflix with subtitles on, and then tried to explain a complex idea to a friend using only memes? That weird feeling—like our brains are being rewired—is exactly what Mihai Nadin's 'The Civilization of Illiteracy' is about. It's not an attack on phones or video games. Instead, it's a mind-bending argument that the very way we think and communicate is undergoing a seismic shift. The book asks: what if we're not becoming 'dumber,' but are instead moving beyond traditional literacy (reading/writing) into a new, image-driven, networked way of understanding the world? Nadin suggests this isn't a decline, but an evolution, and it's reshaping everything from art and science to politics and our personal identities. It's a challenging but thrilling read that will make you look at your screen time in a whole new light.
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Forget everything you think you know about 'dumbing down' culture. Mihai Nadin's The Civilization of Illiteracy presents a radical and provocative thesis: we are not in a decline from a golden age of literacy, but in a transition to a new cognitive paradigm. The 'plot' of this non-fiction work is the tracing of this massive, invisible shift. Nadin argues that the linear, sequential logic fostered by reading and writing is being supplemented, and sometimes supplanted, by a different kind of intelligence. This new intelligence thrives on simultaneity (multiple screens), visual processing (icons, videos), and networked connections (hyperlinks, social media). The 'conflict' is between the old world, built on the book, and the emerging one, built on the digital interface.

Why You Should Read It

This book clicked for me because it reframed my own anxiety. I'd beat myself up for not finishing novels like I used to, feeling my attention span was broken. Nadin suggests maybe it's not broken, but re-tuned. He's not saying books are dead, but that their role in shaping collective thought is changing. What's fascinating is how he connects this to bigger ideas: how this shift affects democracy (can a soundbite culture support complex debate?), creativity (is a TikTok video a valid form of storytelling?), and even our sense of self. It gave me a vocabulary for the digital unease we all feel and made it feel less like a personal failing and more like a historical moment we're living through.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect read for curious minds feeling whiplash from our fast-paced digital world. It's for the philosophy nerd, the tech enthusiast with doubts, the teacher wondering why students learn differently, or anyone who's ever felt 'old' because they don't get a new app. Be warned: it's dense and academic in places, not a breezy beach read. But if you're willing to sit with its big ideas, it's incredibly rewarding. You won't agree with everything Nadin says—I certainly didn't—but you'll find yourself seeing your phone, your news feed, and your own habits with startling new eyes.

Charles Torres
1 year ago

Perfect.

Daniel Young
4 months ago

Finally found time to read this!

Linda Williams
6 months ago

If you enjoy this genre, the arguments are well-supported by credible references. I couldn't put it down.

Richard Flores
1 year ago

Without a doubt, the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. Worth every second.

Linda Allen
1 year ago

Just what I was looking for.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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