Elias > Elias's Quotes

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  • #1
    Pierre Bourdieu
    “Male domination is so rooted in our collective unconscious that we no longer even see it.”
    Pierre Bourdieu

  • #2
    Pierre Bourdieu
    “Every established order tends to produce the naturalization of its own arbitrariness.”
    Pierre Bourdieu

  • #3
    Michel Foucault
    “People know what they do; frequently they know why they do what they do; but what they don't know is what what they do does.”
    Michel Foucault, Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason

  • #4
    Michel Foucault
    “I don't feel that it is necessary to know exactly what I am. The main interest in life and work is to become someone else that you were not in the beginning.”
    Michel Foucault

  • #5
    Slavoj Žižek
    “I think that the task of philosophy is not to provide answers, but to show how the way we perceive a problem can be itself part of a problem.”
    Slavoj Žižek

  • #6
    Gabriel García Márquez
    “You can't eat hope,' the woman said.
    You can't eat it, but it sustains you,' the colonel replied.”
    Gabriel García Márquez; Morino, Angelo (translator), El coronel no tiene quien le escriba
    tags: hope

  • #7
    Marjane Satrapi
    “Rule number six: Everybody should have a car
    Rule number seven: All maids should eat at the table with the others
    Rule number eight: No old person should have to suffer

    Grandmother: In that case, I'll be your first disciple.
    Persepolis: Really?
    Grandmother: But tell me how you'll arrange for old people not to suffer?
    Persepolis: It will simply be forbidden.”
    Marjane Satrapi, The Complete Persepolis

  • #8
    Bruno Latour
    “The hypothesis of this essay is that the word ‘modern’ designates two sets of entirely different practices which must remain distinct if they are to remain effective, but have recently begun to be confused. The first set of practices, by ‘translation’, creates mixtures between entirely new types of beings, hybrids of nature and culture. The second, by ‘purification’, creates two entirely distinct ontological zones: that of human beings on the one hand; that of nonhumans on the other.”
    Bruno Latour, We Have Never Been Modern

  • #9
    “The reference to Latour that helps to introduce some of the background of the present study is to his We Have Never Been Modern (Latour 1993). In that book, Latour seeks ways out of the nature-culture divide —just like Barker, Strathern, Haraway, and many others whom I have not mentioned. Latour doesn’t follow the way this divide was framed and institutionalized in the twentieth century, but, in a wider gesture, links it up with modernity. All modern thinkers, he claims, glorify their ability to distinguish between natural and social phenomena, disqualifying those who are ‘‘unable’’ to do so as premoderns. Meanwhile, however, or so Latour argues, in the practices of the so-called modern world the natural and the social are as intertwined as they are in so-called premodern thinking. This implies that there are clashes between the knowledge articulated in technoscience societies and the knowledges embedded in their practices. While the importance of a clear-cut distinction was loudly proclaimed, it wasn’t converted into action. Therefore, modernity is a state we have never been in, for only our theories make modern divides. Our practices do not. (pp. 30-31)”
    Annemarie Mol, The Body Multiple: Ontology in Medical Practice



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