Subashini > Subashini's Quotes

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  • #1
    Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o
    “This land used to yield. Rains used not to fail. What happened?’ inquired Ruoro. It was Muturi who answered. ‘You forget that in those days the land was not for buying. It was for use. It was also plenty, you need not have beaten one yard over and over again.”
    Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, Petals of Blood

  • #2
    “Describing African students sent to London to study in the 1970s, she writes (and Achebe quotes): They work hard for the Doctorates – They work too hard, Giving away Not only themselves, but All of us – The price is high, My brother, Otherwise the story is as old as empires.”
    Laura Chrisman, Postcolonial contraventions: Cultural readings of race, imperialism and transnationalism

  • #3
    Antonio Gramsci
    “I hate the indifferent. I believe that living means taking sides. Those who really live cannot help being a citizen and a partisan. Indifference and apathy are parasitism, perversion, not life. That is why I hate the indifferent.

    The indifference is the deadweight of history. The indifference operates with great power on history. The indifference operates passively, but it operates. It is fate, that which cannot be counted on. It twists programs and ruins the best-conceived plans. It is the raw material that ruins intelligence. That what happens, the evil that weighs upon all, happens because the human mass abdicates to their will; allows laws to be promulgated that only the revolt could nullify, and leaves men that only a mutiny will be able to overthrow to achieve the power. The mass ignores because it is careless and then it seems like it is the product of fate that runs over everything and everyone: the one who consents as well as the one who dissents; the one who knew as well as the one who didn’t know; the active as well as the indifferent. Some whimper piously, others curse obscenely, but nobody, or very few ask themselves: If I had tried to impose my will, would this have happened?

    I also hate the indifferent because of that: because their whimpering of eternally innocent ones annoys me. I make each one liable: how they have tackled with the task that life has given and gives them every day, what have they done, and especially, what they have not done. And I feel I have the right to be inexorable and not squander my compassion, of not sharing my tears with them.

    I am a partisan, I am alive, I feel the pulse of the activity of the future city that those on my side are building is alive in their conscience. And in it, the social chain does not rest on a few; nothing of what happens in it is a matter of luck, nor the product of fate, but the intelligent work of the citizens. Nobody in it is looking from the window of the sacrifice and the drain of a few. Alive, I am a partisan. That is why I hate the ones that don’t take sides, I hate the indifferent.”
    Antonio Gramsci

  • #4
    Molly Keane
    “Yes, we'll have to put a stop to this bookworming. No future in that.”
    Molly Keane, Good Behaviour

  • #5
    John Kennedy Toole
    “...I mingle with my peers or no one, and since I have no peers, I mingle with no one.”
    John Kennedy Toole, A Confederacy of Dunces

  • #6
    John Kennedy Toole
    “My mother is currently associating with some undesirables who are attempting to transform her into an athlete of sorts, deprave specimens of mankind who regularly bowl their way to oblivion.”
    John Kennedy Toole, A Confederacy of Dunces

  • #7
    John Kennedy Toole
    “Ignatius, what's all this trash on the floor?"
    "That is my worldview that you see. It still must be incorporated into a whole, so be careful where you step.”
    John Kennedy Toole

  • #8
    Leonora Carrington
    “Houses are really bodies. We connect ourselves with walls, roofs, and objects just as we hang on to our livers, skeletons, flesh and bloodstream. I am no beauty, no mirror is necessary to assure me of this absolute fact. Nevertheless I have a death grip on this haggard frame as if it were the limpid body of Venus herself.”
    Leonora Carrington, The Hearing Trumpet

  • #9
    Sally Rooney
    “It was culture as class performance, literature fetishised for its ability to take educated people on false emotional journeys, so that they might afterwards feel superior to the uneducated people whose emotional journeys they liked to read about.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #10
    Sally Rooney
    “She believes Marianne lacks ‘warmth’, by which she means the ability to beg for love from people who hate her.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People



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