Introduction
Books and reading often play big roles in stories about love and personal growth, showing how people connect through words and ideas. The film ‘The Reader’ (2008), directed by Stephen Daldry and based on Bernhard Schlink’s 1995 novel, explores post-World War II Germany through the relationship between young Michael Berg and older Hanna Schmitz. It deals with themes like guilt, literacy, and the Holocaust. This essay looks at how books and reading shape their story, starting from their romance, changing in the court, and continuing in prison. The thesis is that reading evolves from a romantic bond to a tool for redemption and tragedy in Michael and Hanna’s lives.
The Role of Books and Reading in Michael and Hanna’s Romance
In the beginning, books are central to Michael and Hanna’s relationship. Michael, a teenager, reads aloud to Hanna after they start their affair in 1950s Germany. This happens often, with Michael picking classics like ‘The Odyssey’ or Chekhov’s stories. Reading becomes a way they bond, mixing intimacy with learning. As Schlink (1997) shows in the novel the film adapts, Hanna loves listening but can’t read herself, which is a secret. This makes reading a power thing, where Michael shares knowledge, but it also hides Hanna’s illiteracy. It’s romantic, but arguably sets up later problems, like how it shows their age and class differences.
The Shift in the Perception of Reading Books Out Loud in the Court Scene
Later, during Hanna’s trial for being a Nazi guard, reading out loud changes meaning. Michael’s readings are brought up in court, but now they reveal Hanna’s illiteracy. She refuses to admit she can’t write, leading to a harsher sentence. The act of reading, once private and loving, becomes evidence of her shame. According to Donahue (2003), this scene shifts reading from affection to a symbol of moral failure linked to the Holocaust. It’s a turning point, making Michael see their past differently, full of guilt.
The Role of Books and Reading during Hanna’s Years in Prison (Including Her Suicide)
In prison, books help Hanna learn to read and write. Michael sends her tapes of him reading, which motivates her. She reads Holocaust books, seeking understanding. But when she’s about to be released, she kills herself, perhaps because facing the world is too hard after literacy exposes her past. Reading brings some redemption, but also pain, leading to her death. This shows books as a double-edged sword in her life.
Conclusion
Overall, books shift from a romantic connection to symbols of judgment and partial healing in ‘The Reader’. The essay discussed their role in the affair, the court revelation, and prison years ending in suicide. This highlights how literacy ties to personal and historical guilt.
References
- Donahue, W. (2003) ‘Illiteracy and Innocence: Bernhard Schlink’s The Reader’, Philosophy and Literature, 27(2), pp. 416-423.
- Schlink, B. (1997) The Reader. Translated by C. B. Janeway. London: Phoenix.

