Culture How 4chan became the home of the elite reader - The left is losing its grip on the literary realm.

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It’s a Friday in early January and someone on 4chan has invented a new philosophical doctrine: “esoteric Kantianism”. “You must not take Kant’s words at face value,” the anonymous user warns – readers who do so will only take away shallow insights about the half-blind “normie mind”. “You must read between the lines.”

A reading revolution is taking place on this notorious message board, most famous for alt-right memes, anything-goes chatter, and large-scale coordinated pranks (several hoax bomb threats organised by the site have led to arrests and mass evacuations). Users operate under total anonymity and are subject to bare-bones moderation. Most of the ideological avenues offered in /pol/, its politics forum, would leave you estranged from polite society and banned from any conventional social media.

And yet, a new secret generation of autodidacts – frustrated with the state of modern academia and the dilution of the traditional canon – are turning to the website as an unlikely home for literary ambition. Britain’s working class used to shelter a legion of autodidacts, too: set on self-improvement, they staged Shakespeare productions and read classic literature without input from local authorities or red-brick academics. Later, in mid-century America, door-to-door salesmen shilled 54-book sets of Mortimer Adler’s Great Books of the Western World to people who wanted a classical education. This impulse hasn’t gone away. It has migrated to /lit/.

The members of /lit/, 4chan’s literary subforum, love Dostoyevsky, Joyce and Nabokov. They abhor the gatekeepers of traditional publishing and the moral pieties that beset academia in the 2010s. They’ve created their own recommendation ecosystem in the form of homemade charts, huge Jpegs which serve as visual reading guides. “Start with the Greeks,” the most famous one says, leading beginners through an annotated flowchart from modern mythological retellings to Homer and then, eventually, Aristotle. This advice is dished out to wannabe autodidacts on /lit/ so often that it has become a meme. (“I will not start with the Greeks,” says a gun-toting civilian in one image, as soldiers surround his house and order him to read Plato.)

Gen Z might be going to university at record rates. But the transformational ideals on 4chan find no equal in the English-speaking academy. And so an instinct once associated with leftish institutions like universities is migrating into the purview of the very-online right. 4chan is becoming a natural home for the ambitious reader.

Take the Atlantic article last year that revealed students at America’s most elite institutions no longer have the stamina or fluency needed to read entire novels for class. Literature classes in American schools are gradually exchanging “whole books” for short, analysable extracts, which provide a close model of the sort of reading involved in standardised testing. At the university level, lecturers are adjusting their syllabuses in turn to suit those who don’t or can’t read for long periods: one Melville specialist at Columbia has stopped teaching undergraduates Moby-Dick (voted /lit/’s favourite book in 2023). And similar omissions are filtering into the real-world intelligentsia: the editor of the New York Times’ book review section recently admitted on a podcast that he had not read George Eliot’s Middlemarch (fine, perhaps, for a normal person, but not for a literary editor at the New York Times).

When the Atlantic article was reposted on /lit/, the board’s denizens – between angry segues about mass immigration and chemsex (as is to be expected on 4chan) – seemed to agree with its claims. “I must be the only 22 year old on the planet who goes to my college library to find books by John Ruskin,” one wrote. “These are follow up indoctrination thinking schools [sic],” another said of modern universities. 4chan’s book ecosystem, with its focus on the traditional canon, seems to provide a refuge for those disillusioned by the bare-bones treatment of literature in the English-speaking academy. One user attests that English lit in 2025 “is taught basically as a technique or a social-civic tool rather than anything approximating an art”.

The inhabitants of /lit/ see themselves as the victim of anti-canon efforts, as the academy has sought to “decolonise” and expand the curriculum over the past decade. And /lit/’s reaction is hardly unreasonable: there’s a difference between great books (well-written, perhaps undiscovered) and Great Books, which stay in the accepted canon because they have had an outsized influence on influential writers. It isn’t testable and it doesn’t contribute to any sort of transferable skill – but there is revelatory joy in following a thread from one work to the next, watching as previously hidden details reveal themselves in spoken language and in popular culture.

This experience is unavailable in 2025’s version of academia, but it can be found online – on dodgy message boards and in pirated PDFs. All sorts of students hunger for great literature, but autodidact culture seems to move from one political pole to another based on the infrastructure available. In Britain, Victorian “mutual improvement societies” and 20th-century labour colleges either leaned to the left or were openly associated with communist groups. This side can blame itself for the modern political proclivities of /lit/: humanities academia shifted in the 1960s to accommodate the revolutionary likes of Foucault and Freire, but its current bar to entry – tens of thousands of pounds, plus years on a low doctoral wage – keeps any remaining benefits out of reach to the large majority. And leftists have been slow to produce any mainstream criticism of Big Tech companies, which pushed us into an accelerated state of post-literacy after making a commodity and business out of attention.

But there will always be people who want a long, consequential view of the humanities, regardless of their financial circumstances or previous educational background. This time, the online right has provided the intellectual scaffolding and infrastructure.

https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/2025/01/how-4chan-became-the-home-of-the-elite-reader (Archive)
 
Does anyone have the image recounting the cute girl booktuber who /lit/ seemingly managed to scare off the internet? That was some funny shit if I remember correctly they weren’t even being mean just in the process of waifu-idolatry and she got a whiff of it and bailed. Which bless that woman she has a good head on her shoulders. Edit: Found it from Reddit.
https://www.reddit.com/r/greentext/comments/12dwnel/lits_finest_hour/#lightbox
booktuber.webp
 
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one Melville specialist at Columbia has stopped teaching undergraduates Moby-Dick (voted /lit/’s favourite book in 2023)
HOT TAKE: the best part of Moby-Dick is the entirely realistic and accurate depiction of whaling, an immensely important industry that has entirely vanished into history. The rest of it is some dude who was coping and seething because he let a whale bite his leg off (skill issue).

It's towards the bottom of my Best Boat Books list, below Iron Coffins, Two Years Before The Mast and Patrick O'Brien's novels.
 
What is wrong with contemporary literature? The number one book on the New York Times fiction list for 2024 is "James". A politically correct re-writing of the Mark Twain novel Huckleberry Finn from the perspective of the black guy for modern audiences.


- A masterpiece that will help redefine one of the classics of American literature."—Chicago Tribune
- While many narrative set pieces of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn remain in place, Jim’s agency, intelligence and compassion are shown in a radically new light.
- James is destined to be a cornerstone of twenty-first century American literature. (Oprah Daily)
- Everett humanizes the character, who goes by James, re-inventing him as a wise and literate man, who has conversations with enlightenment philosophers in his dreams and teaches other enslaved people to read. James and the other black characters in the book purposefully hide their literacy and wisdom from the white characters who will undoubtedly feel threatened by educated blacks and further punish them.

- In development as a feature film to be produced by Steven Spielberg

You just can't make this stuff up.
This sound suspiciously like Wicked. Rewriting classics is gay and retarded, "here's my version of Alice in Wonderland from the perspective of the queen of hearts, and why she was justified in hunting down Alice because that white colonizing bitch needed to die."
 
HOT TAKE: the best part of Moby-Dick is the entirely realistic and accurate depiction of whaling, an immensely important industry that has entirely vanished into history. The rest of it is some dude who was coping and seething because he let a whale bite his leg off (skill issue).

It's towards the bottom of my Best Boat Books list, below Iron Coffins, Two Years Before The Mast and Patrick O'Brien's novels.
Chapter 1 of Moby Dick is awesome one of the best openings to any book. Melville really gets you hyped to read about the sea. Then it takes a drop, you've inspired me to pick it up.
 
HOT TAKE: the best part of Moby-Dick is the entirely realistic and accurate depiction of whaling, an immensely important industry that has entirely vanished into history. The rest of it is some dude who was coping and seething because he let a whale bite his leg off (skill issue).

It's towards the bottom of my Best Boat Books list, below Iron Coffins, Two Years Before The Mast and Patrick O'Brien's novels.
I read Moby Dick and just get glassy-eyed in the chapters about whaling and rigging and the many uses for whale oil and more rigging. I just want to get to the madness and the obsession and the revenge. I understand the point of those chapters, but they just end up being glossed over to get to the meat of the story.
 
I read Moby Dick and just get glassy-eyed in the chapters about whaling and rigging and the many uses for whale oil and more rigging. I just want to get to the madness and the obsession and the revenge. I understand the point of those chapters, but they just end up being glossed over to get to the meat of the story.
I've reread Moby Dick multiple times and tend to quickly skim through or outright skip those parts now. Ishmael does tend to drop a philosophic gem at the end of those descriptions though, so they're not without interest for rereading. As you say, they have a point: they're necessary so readers will understand the mechanics of the chase; what happens to Ahab would be unintelligible without the careful description of the how the whaleboats work preceding it. Books like Moby Dick and Les Miserables try to give readers all the context they'll need to understand the world and assume little or no prior knowledge. I appreciate this, especially for a lost art like whaling, but it does lead to some very dry passages. Ishmael's reveries and the book's transformation into the Tragedy of Ahab are so great though that it's absolutely worth it. My favorite novel by far.
 
Does anyone have the image recounting the cute girl booktuber who /lit/ seemingly managed to scare off the internet? That was some funny shit if I remember correctly they weren’t even being mean just in the process of waifu-idolatry and she got a whiff of it and bailed. Which bless that woman she has a good head on her shoulders. Edit: Found it from Reddit.
https://www.reddit.com/r/greentext/comments/12dwnel/lits_finest_hour/#lightbox
View attachment 6830981
imagine unironically simping for a woman on the internet on fucking 4chan
and imagine deleting your channel because one fag was super autistic
 
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With the rate things are going, I won't be surprised if 4chan winds up being something you can cite on your paper as a reference to your book report. And when the teacher asks, you can always direct them to the long autistic post about what you're researching and how they called you a dumb retarded nigger right on top of it.
 
HOT TAKE: the best part of Moby-Dick is the entirely realistic and accurate depiction of whaling, an immensely important industry that has entirely vanished into history. The rest of it is some dude who was coping and seething because he let a whale bite his leg off (skill issue).
while i disagree with you on the non whaling parts, i do agree on the whaling parts. i did find those parts interesting and it also lead me to having a little bit more interest in whales than i did before. i know know what a right whale is and why sperm whales are called sperm whales.
 
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