
Understand How Reading Made Us: 2. How Reading Made Our Feelings
Mar 23, 2026
Naomi Alderman, novelist who explores social and gender dynamics, reflects on how novels reveal inner lives and broaden access to knowledge. Sarah Maxwell, founder of Saucy Books, explains how romantic fiction creates emotional mirroring and pleasure in the bookshop setting. They discuss novels provoking public feeling, reading’s role in shaping empathy and social change, and how solitary reading reshaped societies.
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Novel Craze Sparked 18th Century Moral Panic
- 18th century novel reading caused intense emotional identification that alarmed contemporaries and sparked moral panics about addiction and madness.
- Richardson's Pamela, Rousseau's Julie and Goethe's Werther provoked mass weeping, rented chapters by the hour and claims of a Werther suicide fever.
Novels Work As Perspective Taking Technology
- Novels uniquely put readers inside other minds, enabling vivid perspective taking that increases empathy and understanding.
- Naomi Alderman says The Power helps male readers feel what it's like to inhabit a shorter, less muscular body and thereby shift sympathy.
Literacy May Have Driven the Humanitarian Revolution
- The rise of printed material and literacy in the 18th century plausibly contributed to the humanitarian reforms of the era by expanding empathy and circulating ideas.
- Steven Pinker links cheaper paper, higher literacy and explosion of printed matter to declines in gruesome punishments and slavery.


















