Where the Stress Falls Quotes

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Where the Stress Falls: Essays Where the Stress Falls: Essays by Susan Sontag
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“You said that we owe literature almost everything we are and what we have been. If books disappear, history will disappear, and human beings will also disappear. I am sure you are right. Books are not only the arbitrary sum of our dreams, and our memory. They also give us the model of self-transcendence. Some people think of reading only as a kind of escape: an escape from the “real” everyday world to an imaginary world, the world of books. Books are much more. They are a way of being fully human.”
Susan Sontag, Where the Stress Falls: Essays
“BEAUTY. The visionary authority of Childs’s work resides, in part, in its lack of rhetoric. Her strict avoidance of cliché, and of anything that would make the work disjunctive, fragmented. The refusal of humor, self-mockery, flirtation with the audience, cult of personality. The distaste for the exhibitionistic: movement calling attention to itself, isolatable “effects.” Beauty as, first of all, an art of refusal.”
Susan Sontag, Where the Stress Falls: Essays
“(When I look at my picture I read stubbornness, balked vanity, panic, vulnerability.)”
Susan Sontag, Where the Stress Falls: Essays
“Pašovi invited me to see his Grad (City), a collage, with music, of declamations, partly drawn from texts by Constantine Cavafy, Zbigniew Herbert, and Sylvia Plath, using a dozen actors;”
Susan Sontag, Where the Stress Falls: Essays