David Cronin > David's Quotes

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  • #1
    Germaine Greer
    “A library is a place where you can lose your innocence without losing your virginity.”
    Germaine Greer

  • #2
    Germaine Greer
    “Maybe I couldn’t make it. Maybe I don’t have a pretty smile, good teeth, nice tits, long legs, a cheeky arse, a sexy voice. Maybe I don’t know how to handle men and increase my market value, so that the rewards due to the feminine will accrue to me. Then again, maybe I’m sick of the masquerade. I’m sick of pretending eternal youth. I’m sick of belying my own intelligence, my own will, my own sex. I’m sick of peering at the world through false eyelashes, so everything I see is mixed with a shadow of bought hairs; I’m sick of weighting my head with a dead mane, unable to move my neck freely, terrified of rain, of wind, of dancing too vigorously in case I sweat into my lacquered curls. I’m sick of the Powder Room. I’m sick of pretending that some fatuous male’s self-important pronouncements are the objects of my undivided attention, I’m sick of going to films and plays when someone else wants to, and sick of having no opinions of my own about either. I’m sick of being a transvestite. I refuse to be a female impersonator. I am a woman, not a castrate.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #3
    Germaine Greer
    “Libraries are reservoirs of strength, grace and wit, reminders of order, calm and continuity, lakes of mental energy, neither warm nor cold, light nor dark ... In any library in the world, I am at home, unselfconscious, still and absorbed."

    [Still in Melbourne January 1987]”
    Germaine Greer, Daddy, We Hardly Knew You

  • #4
    Germaine Greer
    “You're only young once, but you can be immature forever”
    Germaine Greer

  • #5
    Germaine Greer
    “Sadness is the matrix from which wit and irony spring; sadness is uncomfortable and creative, which is why consumer society cannot tolerate it.”
    Germaine Greer

  • #6
    Germaine Greer
    “Yet if a woman never lets herself go, how will she ever know how far she might have got? If she never takes off her high-heeled shoes, how will she ever know how far she could walk or how fast she could run?”
    Germaine Greer

  • #7
    Germaine Greer
    “Is it too much to ask that women be spared the daily struggle for superhuman beauty in order to offer it to the caresses of a subhumanly ugly mate?”
    Germaine Greer

  • #8
    Germaine Greer
    “Security is the denial of life”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #9
    Germaine Greer
    “The most cursory examination of even the most progressive organs of information reveals a curious inability to recognize women as newsmakers, unless they are young or married to a head of state or naked or pregnant by some triumph of technology or perpetrators or victims of some hideous crime or any combiniation of the above. Women's issues are often disguised as people issues, unless they are relegated to the women's pages which amazingly still suvive. Senior figures are all male; even the few women who are deemed worthy of obituaries are shown in images from their youth, as if the last fourty years of their lives have been without achievement of any kind. If you analyse the by-lines in your morning paper, you will see that the senior editorial staff are all older men, supported by a rabble of junior females, the infinitely replacesable 'hackettes'.”
    Germaine Greer, The Whole Woman

  • #10
    Germaine Greer
    “Many a housewife staring at the back of her husband's newspaper, or listening to his breathing in bed is lonelier than any spinster in a rented room.”
    Germaine Greer

  • #11
    Germaine Greer
    “Human beings have an inalienable right to invent themselves.”
    Germaine Greer

  • #12
    Germaine Greer
    “In the struggle to remain a complete person and to love from her fullness instead of her inadequacy a woman may appear hard. She may feel her early conditioning tugging her in the direction of surrender, but she ought to remember that she was originally loved for herself; she ought to hang on to herself and not find herself nagging, helpless, irritable and trapped. Perhaps I am not old enough yet to promise that the self-reliant woman is always loved, but she cannot be lonely as long as there are people in the world who need her joy and her strength, but certainly in my experience it has always been so. Lovers who are free to go when they are restless always come back; lovers who are free to change remain interesting. The bitter animosity and obscenity of divorce is unknown where individuals have not become Siamese twins. A lover who comes to your bed of his own accord is more likely to sleep with his arms around you all night than a lover who has nowhere else to sleep.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #13
    Germaine Greer
    “I do think that women could make politics irrelevant; by a kind of spontaneous cooperative action the like of which we have never seen; which is so far from people’s ideas of state structure or viable social structure that it seems to them like total anarchy — when what it really is, is very subtle forms of interrelation that do not follow some heirarchal pattern which is fundamentally patriarchal. The opposite to patriarchy is not matriarchy but fraternity, yet I think it’s women who are going to have to break this spiral of power and find the trick of cooperation.”
    Germaine Greer

  • #14
    Germaine Greer
    “...the consequences of militancy do not disappear when the need for militancy is over. Freedom is fragile and must be protected. To sacrifice it, even as a temporary measure, is to betray it.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #15
    Germaine Greer
    “Status ought not to be measured by a woman's ability to attract and snare a man.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #16
    Germaine Greer
    “It is often falsely assumed, even by feminists, that sexuality is the enemy of the female who really wants to develop these aspects of her personality, and this is perhaps the most misleading aspect of movements like the National Organization of Women. It was not the insistence upon her sex that weakened the American woman student's desire to make something of her education, but the insistence upon a passive sexual role
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #17
    Germaine Greer
    “It takes a great deal of courage and independence to decide to design your own image instead of the one that society rewards, but it gets easier as you go along.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #18
    Germaine Greer
    “The housewife is an unpaid worker in her husband's house in return for the security of being a permanent employee: hers is the reductio ad absurdum of the employee who accepts a lower wage in return for permanence of his employment. But the lowest paid employees can be and are laid off, and so are wives. They have no savings, no skills which they can bargain with elsewhere, and they must bear the stigma of having been sacked.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #19
    Germaine Greer
    “I find that those men who are personally most polite to women, who call them angels and all that, cherish in secret the greatest contempt for them.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #20
    Germaine Greer
    “I didn't fight to get women out from behind vacuum cleaners to get them onto the board of Hoover.”
    Germaine Greer, The Whole Woman

  • #21
    Germaine Greer
    “Love, love, love – all the wretched cant of it, masking egotism, lust, masochism, fantasy under a mythology of sentimental postures, a welter of self-induced miseries and joys, blinding and masking the essential personalities in the frozen gestures of courtship, in the kissing and the dating and the desire, the compliments and the quarrels which vivify its barrenness. ”
    Germaine Greer

  • #22
    Germaine Greer
    “Now as before, women must refuse to be meek and guileful, for truth cannot be served by dissimulation. Women who fancy that they manipulate the world by pussy power and gentle cajolery are fools. It is slavery to have to adopt such tactics.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #23
    Germaine Greer
    “We still make love to organs and not people; that so far from realising that people are never more idiosyncratic, never more totally there when they make love, we re never more incommunicative, never more alone.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #24
    Germaine Greer
    “Those miserable women who blame the men who let them down for their misery and isolation enact every day the initial mistake of sacrificing their personal responsibility for themselves.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #25
    Germaine Greer
    “Freud is the father of psychoanalysis. It has no mother.”
    Germaine Greer

  • #26
    Germaine Greer
    “Loneliness is never more cruel than when it is felt in close propinquity with someone who has ceased to communicate. Many a housewife staring at the back of her husband's newspaper, or listening to his breathing in bed is lonelier than any spinster in a rented room.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #27
    Germaine Greer
    “Probably the only place where a man can feel really secure is in a maximum security prison, except for the imminent threat of release. The problem of recidivism ought to have shown young men like John Greenaway just what sort of a notion security is, but there is no indication that he would understand it. Security is when everything is settled, when nothing can happen to you; security is the denial of life. Human beings are better equipped to cope with disaster and hardship than they are with unvarying security, but as long as security is the highest value in a community they can have little opportunity to decide this for themselves.”
    Germaine Greer, The Female Eunuch

  • #28
    Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
    “In case you haven't noticed, as the result of a shamelessly rigged election in Florida, in which thousands of African Americans were arbitrarily disenfranchised, we now present ourselves to the rest of the world as proud, grinning, jut-jawed, pitiless war-lovers with appalling powerful weaponry - who stand unopposed.
    In case you haven't noticed, we are now as feared and hated all over the world as the Nazi's once were.
    And with good reason.
    In case you haven't noticed, our unelected leaders have dehumanized millions and millions of human beings simply because of their religion and race. We wound 'em and kill 'em and torture 'em and imprison 'em all we want.
    Piece of cake.
    In case you haven't noticed, we also dehumanize our own soldiers, not because of their religion or race, but because of their low social class.
    Send 'em anywhere. Make 'em do anything.
    Piece of cake.
    The O'Reilly Factor.
    So I am a man without a country, except for the librarians and a Chicago paper called "In These Times."
    Before we attacked Iraq, the majestic "New York Times" guaranteed there were weapons of destruction there.
    Albert Einstein and Mark Twain gave up on the human race at the end of their lives, even though Twain hadn't even seen the First World War. War is now a form of TV entertainment, and what made the First World War so particularly entertaining were two American inventions, barbed wire and the machine gun.
    Shrapnel was invented by an Englishman of the same name. Don't you wish you could have something named after you?
    Like my distinct betters Einstein and Twain, I now give up on people too. I am a veteran of the Second World War and I have to say this is the not the first time I surrendered to a pitiless war machine.
    My last words? "Life is no way to treat an animal, not even a mouse."
    Napalm came from Harvard. Veritas!
    Our president is a Christian? So was Adolf Hitler.
    What can be said to our young people, now that psychopathic personalities, which is to say persons without consciences, without senses of pity or shame, have taken all the money in the treasuries of our government and corporations and made it all their own?”
    Kurt Vonnegut, A Man Without a Country



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