EVERYONE Has Read This but Me - The Catch-Up Book Club discussion
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Which classics have the most enduring cultural references or iconic ideas?
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My second example comes from A Few Good Men. Jack Nicholson is on trial as the General Jessup and Tom Cruise’s character Kaffee has him on the stand.
“I want the truth!”
“You can’t handle the truth!”
Classic line that has been quoted over and over again. At the end of the day ... yeah, we want the truth. Even if it’s ugly.
So two great movies from the 90’s that were a book and a play. Great writing!

Yes! "1984" and "big brother" are an enduring part of our vocabulary. These terms can be used to quickly describe concerns about cameras, surveillance, or any type of oversight or control policy.




Yes, I wasn't sure but wasn't the book used to brainwash people in some sense?

But I'll have to do some pondering to come up with another example akin to Shanna's "Big Brother." Great question!

Yes. The book title is well known (as a symbol of evil perhaps), even though most of us have never read it.
If you used the book as a prop in a movie, it would sure tell us something about the character.
During the election it was revealed (by his ex wife) that Trump had a book of Hitler speeches in a bedside cabinet. It was erroneously reported as Mein Kampf, and it outraged people. I wouldn't be surprised if other politicians didn't have the speeches too. Hitler was clearly an effective speaker, in that he got so many people to follow him, despite all the hate an vitriol (or because of it?).


Thank you. That was an interesting piece!

This is so true. Gandhi was hugely influenced by Thoreau's book. In a large way it influenced the non-violence movement of his.

That's interesting. I didn't know that the booked coined the phrase- not that I thought too much about it, but I guess I assumed the phrase had already been around and the book just borrowed it for the title. It's one of those classics that's on my TBR- maybe I'll move it up the list now!
I thought of another one- a little more obscure, perhaps. Among Geocachers, people milling about a hidden cache but aren't geocachers are called Muggles from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.

In a related search yesterday, I spotted the term "shawshanked" and then "pulling a Shawshank." I found many definitions but absolutely no consensus on what those terms might mean. I would have guessed prison break, but others provided ideas that were more meaningful and nuanced, referring to different aspect of the film. (I say film because I doubt many people have read the short story about Rita Hayworth's poster.)

Great example. He inspired a movement at the time I think, and still influences people today/


For example:
Circe
Mythos: A Retelling of the Myths of Ancient Greece
Iliade
Odyssè
Galatea
Pandora
Helen
Agamemnon
Menelaus
Achylles
Ikarus
Daedalus
Odysseus
Nike
Apollo
Aphrodite
Ares
Artemis
Athena (and her owls of wisdom)
Minotaur
Perseus...

I also never read Faust - making a deal with the devil - but I've seen the idea copied elsewhere. I don't know if this is also the source of the crossroads where you find the devil.
Not to be confused with the idea of coming to a crossroad in your life.

Don Quixote +1 of the same
Eldorado
King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table lots of epic stuff on this: Knights, Queen, Merlin the Wizard...
Most of faity tales are a treasure trove of references:
the Witch
the Hag
the Golden Apple
Cinderella
the King
the Prince (and forget not about his white horse)
the Frog
the Wise One
the Simpleton
the Fairy / Godmother

For example:
Circe
Mythos: A Retelling of the Myths of Ancient Greece
[book:Iliade|19394..."
This! I had to read through some of the stories with my kids recently. I didn't realize how many modern concepts originated in Greek myth. Names, actions, ideas, so much has filtered into modern thought and pop culture.


For example:
Circe
Mythos: A Retelling of the Myths of Ancient Greece
[book:Iliade|19394..."
I really want to read The Odyssey (I remember some of it - the Sirens, the men turned into pigs, another man moved into his house) but I guess I have to read The Iliad first. I read some Greek and Roman mythology when I was young, but now it's all a jumble.
I fell in love with marble statues of Cupid and Psyche and I feel like I should know more about them. Do you have a recommendation?
I think mythology must be great inspiration for writers.

That sounds beautiful. I don't think I know that story at all.

Don Quixote +1 of the same
Eldorado
King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table lots of epic stuff on this: Kn..."
I remember Man of La Mancha when I was a kid, but I've never read Don Quixote. I have an idea of what "tilting at windmills" means in modern life, but I don't think I know what it meant in the context of the book.

Lake Guatavita is amazingly beautiful. Actually all of Colombia is beautiful. Great food too.


Beauty and the Beast and
East O' the Sun and West O' the Moon
Or maybe the motif is older than all of the above; maybe it's in our collective unconscious. I'm thinking about C.G. Jung and Joseph Campbell though I've yet to actually read anything by them... I know them from the memes of Jungian psychology and the power of myth....



I don't know if Animal Farm (one of my very favorite books) has anything besides "Four legs good, two legs bad," and I don't know who nowadays even recognizes that.
I think we've named a lot of valuable books that have the power to influence the reader. But I think the original poster was looking for quotes, scenarios, character types, and other iconographic bits that have power even when removed from the book. Without context, we still know the teenage Jewish girl in the attic... even if we can't remember her name or exactly when or why she was hiding.
Books mentioned in this topic
East O' the Sun and West O' the Moon (other topics)Beauty and the Beast (other topics)
Ramayana (other topics)
Mahabarata (other topics)
Utopia (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
C.G. Jung (other topics)Joseph Campbell (other topics)
Henry David Thoreau (other topics)
Henry David Thoreau (other topics)
Henry David Thoreau (other topics)
I'm thinking of things like Dante's Inferno (views of hell), or the Trojan Horse (which came from a book by Homer, not actual Greek history).
I'm also thinking of plots or scenes that have inspired many copies. I read Tom Sawyer many times to my kids, and I began to spot the essence of the scenes in many other books, shows and movies. Examples - The fence painting trick. Taking the blame for something yourself in order to win someone over. Going to your own funeral.
If I were asking about movies, Gone with the Wind, Casablanca, and Star Wars have probably generated the most oft repeated quotes.
The basic plot idea from "Strangers on a train" has been copied many times. Sometimes the detective who solves the murder will even reference the title to quickly communicate the theory of the crime.
There is a common trick used by men trying to pick someone up, and by spies trying to gain the trust of a target. You have a friend or colleague attack or annoy a person, and then you can swoop in and come to their rescue. I'm wondering where that plot device was first seen. And what is it called other than the jerk trick?
Do you have more examples?