Eating People Is Wrong Quotes

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Eating People Is Wrong Eating People Is Wrong by Malcolm Bradbury
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Eating People Is Wrong Quotes Showing 1-19 of 19
“With sociology one can do anything and call it work.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“Well, it's really no use our talking in the way we have been doing if the words we use mean something different to each of us...and nothing.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“Well, aren't you just saying it's better to be neurotic, sensitive, and miserable than unimaginative, adjusted and content? Is it really better?”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“You have a faculty for defining the simplest in terms of the grandiose, so that a poor devil like me can't understand it.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“Oh, it must be wonderful to be educated. What does it feel like?'
'It's like having an operation,' said Treece. 'You don't know you've had it until long after it's over.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“This was the sort of thing that happened to persons of this sort, sensitives, who fought the world and always, in the end, let it win, because there was a lot more taste to defeat than to victory.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“With my sort of book there's no resolution, because there's no solution. The problems aren't answered in the end because there is no answer. They're problems that are handed on to the reader, not solved for him so that he can go away thinking he lives in a beautiful world. It's not a beautiful world.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“After all, the function of a vacation is regenerative, not luxurious. It's to restore our equipment so that we can live our ordinary lives better.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“But you are involved in the world, and your actions have consequences for other people, and if you don't recognize that, then that's the supreme kind of cruelty. Everyone shares someone else's fate to some extent.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“One can always satisfy oneself, I suppose; it's other people one can't satisfy. One thinks one's way of life is sound and then comes an external vision to say: you are a fake, you are nothing, you're animal and must die, and no one will know you were ever here. It's an intimation of the whole absurdity of what you are and do. It's the worst kind of despair.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“Madness, genius, originality - it's all the same thing; it's a breaking of our normal value structure and the substitution of another one.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“Treece quite seriously divided the world into writers, who led life as a conscious effort, and people, and people who didn't; sometimes he preferred writers and sometimes he preferred people.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“The trouble with me is, Treece thought, that I'm a liberal humanist who believes in original sin. I think of man as a noble creature who has only to extend himself to the full range of his powers to be civilized and good; yet his performance by and large has been intrinsically evil and could be more so as the extension continues.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“One is congenitally a woman; one tries not to be, but it's a question of one's humanity.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“You must come out into the real world and face these problems sensibly and maturely. These lavatories are just an adolescent escape-mechanism, like going to the pictures; they're a dream world. You must come to terms with things, and not expect too much.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“Have a little sociological beano. As you said - in sociology one can do anything and call it work.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“This education we're giving them is the tool of destruction, of course; that's what makes it so painful. We're showing them how to accomplish the ritual murder of ourselves.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“Well, really, how would you like to make love with someone who kept twittering about his pure mystic modality and wanted to stick flowers in your navel?”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong
“..it lay in the true function of the university to promote that interplay of view, that discussion and dispute, that cumulative narrowing down of possibilities that led to the formation of accurate opinion. The students could be, as it were (he said), the rubbing post for the thought of his teacher.”
Malcolm Bradbury, Eating People Is Wrong