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Alain De Botton video

Alain de Botton: How Proust Can Change Your Life

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5 years ago on 12 August 2018 12:16

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Alain de Botton sees literature as a series of lenses that can significantly change the way you view the world.

Alain de Botton was born in Zurich, Switzerland in 1969 and now lives in London. He is a writer of essayistic books that have been described as a 'philosophy of everyday life.' He's written on love, travel, architecture and literature. His books have been bestsellers in 30 countries. Alain also started and helps to run a school in London called The School of Life, dedicated to a new vision of education. Alain's latest book is titled Religion for Atheists and is published in the Netherlands, Italy, Korea, Turkey and Brazil in 2011 and in the UK, US and other territories in 2012.

Alain started writing at a young age. His first book, Essays in Love [titled On Love in the US], was published when he was twenty-three.

Transcript--
I think the way to look at literature is as an instrument that sensitizes us to different things. We all know that if five different people are asked to describe one scene, they will all describe it differently. Some will describe the light, others will focus on what people's feet were doing, others will look at the, you know, material, shape of the room or whatever. A great writer picks up on those things that matter. It's almost like their radar is attuned to the most significant moments.

What literature is about is a record of people with very sophisticated radars who are picking up on the really important stuff. The interesting thing is that, for me, that radar is not something we should simply passively accept while we read the book. It's something we should learn from. We should shut the book and then say, "Okay, I've read Jane Austin or Proust or Shakespeare and now I'm going to see my mother or I'm going to have a chat with my aunt or I'm going to go and, you know, talk to some friends in a coffee shop, and rather than just doing it the normal way, I'm going to look at them and I'm going to ask myself that basic question, 'how would Jane Austin see them? How would Proust see them? How would Shakespeare see them?'"

In other words, I'm not just going to look at the world of Shakespeare or Jane Austin through my eyes, I'm going to look at my world through their eyes. That is the benefit that is the intelligence giving power of great literature. We are sensitized by the books we read. And the more books we read and the deeper their lessons sink into us, the more pairs of glasses we have. And those glasses will enable us to see things that we would otherwise have missed.

Directed / Produced by Jonathan Fowler & Elizabeth Rodd

Alain de Botton:  I think the way to look at literature is as an instrument that sensitizes us to different things.  We all know that if five different people are asked to describe one scene, they will all describe it differently.  Some will describe the light, others will focus on what people's feet were doing, others will look at the, you know, material, shape of the room or whatever.  A great writer picks up on those things that matter.  It's almost like their radar is attuned to the most significant moments.  
What literature is about is a record of people with very sophisticated radars who are picking up on the really important stuff.  The interesting thing is that, for me, that radar is not something we should simply passively accept while we read the book.  It's something we should learn from.  We should shut the book and then say, "Okay, I've read Jane Austin or Proust or Shakespeare and now I'm going to see my mother or I'm going to have a chat with my aunt or I'm going to go and, you know, talk to some friends in a coffee shop, and rather than just doing it the normal way, I'm going to look at them and I'm going to ask myself that basic question, 'how would Jane Austin see them?  How would Proust see them?  How would Shakespeare see them?'"  
In other words, I'm not just going to look at the world of Shakespeare or Jane Austin through my eyes, I'm going to look at my world through their eyes.  That is the benefit that is the intelligence giving power of great literature.  We are sensitized by the books we read.  And the more books we read and the deeper their lessons sink into us, the more pairs of glasses we have.  And those glasses will enable us to see things that we would otherwise have missed.  
Directed / Produced by
Jonathan Fowler & Elizabeth Rodd