In recent decades the history of literacy has engaged the interests of many Western scholars, particularly those concerned with applying the techniques and approaches of the social sciences to the broad issues of educational history. The simplistic notion that links higher rates of literacy with progress, rationality, modernity, and other benign abstractions, has been challenged by a group of Western historians intent on probing the complex social determinants of literacy in Europe and North America. Eschewing simple quantitative estimates of literacy, they have sought to analyze the quality and meaning of its possession, investigating the revealing problems of who was literate, what was the kind of literacy, when did literacy exist, and for what reasons. Their findings have been provocative, and their research continues to stimulate controversy as well as new insights.