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The Anthropologists The Anthropologists by Aysegül Savas
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The Anthropologists Quotes Showing 1-17 of 17
“This was the other thing: it seemed that our interests could be legitimized only if we made something of them—a book, an exhibit.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“All the months that I had been filming, I'd thought that there were so many ways of living, of inhabiting the park. I wanted to know as many configurations as possible, all the strange and unique ways. But lately, as I went over the scenes again and again, smoothing their edges, positioning them into a fluid conversation, I'd begun to understand that there was, also, only one way to live beneath the multitude of forms, one way forward through the fleeting hours of the day.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“Asya, my grandmother said, don’t complicate the point. We named you after a whole continent and you’re filming a park.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“Where do I feel most like myself? I don't know how to answer that question. I guess I'm still looking.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“It was the best we could manage regarding the heartbreak of a parent’s visit: that we hadn’t tried hard enough, that our lives felt strange to them and that these days of tourism were all we would ever have together.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“We never allowed our parents their unhappiness I said and we never allowed them their individual individuality before they were shackled to parenthood”.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“We never allowed our parents. They're unhappiness I said and we never allowed them their individual individuality before they were shackled to parenthood”.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
tags: family
“During my interview at the park I was mesmerized by the routines of strangers. I wanted to ask questions that borrowed deeper into the fabric of a single day. As I continue filming I was also beginning to articulate a feeling I had had dormant for a long time . Everyone It seemed to me has something truly weird about them something unique and bizarre. This uniqueness was most apparent in everyday act, in the banal rather than the extraordinary : the way to pick clothes for the day, the things they ate, how they spent a free hour. This was their compass. It seemed to me, more so than any more abstraction”.”
Ayşegül Savaş, The Anthropologists
“At home, I placed the vase in various settings but everywhere I tried, it looked unnecessary, even ugly, so I put it away in a cupboard with other objects I had bought without dedication, because they had briefly offered an idea of something.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“I didn’t tell anyone else. There was the problem of expressing my devastation. Grandparents were meant to be old; they were meant to get sick. This was among the sorrows of life for which outsiders were not expected to pause their routines, to inconvenience themselves.

There were tragedies of the highest order that upended ordinary life, the ones that ushered in deviations of kindness. Then there was life itself, at every turn a devastation, which nevertheless did nothing to stall its flow.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“She was very small, which was a surprise each time we saw her, as if she had sprung out of a fairytale. She had bright blue eyes and wore theatrical clothes in unexpected combinations—canvas and silk, velvet and plastic beads. At first I had taken her outfits as a sign of eccentricity, or an artistic sensibility, but she was simply childish. She delighted in life.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“I arrived at the party with a bottle of wine, a log of cheese, and a novel in translation by a writer whose books I'd seen on bookshop displays.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“I had met Lena at the birthday picnic of a woman named Sharon. She and her husband, Paul, organised a monthly gathering of expatriates, which I went to mostly without Manu, because he objected to the formal pursuit of friendship.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“I was good at overlooking grievances for a bit, until I had enough stored up to pick a fight.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“One time, Lena had told me that she could identify at a glance people who had transformed in life. Those who had become more beautiful, more educated, wealthier. It was the lingering insecurity that gave them away, she said, which others often mistook for modesty. Whereas the modesty of truly secure people was in fact a type of arrogance, a certainty about their life and its place in the greater scheme of things.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“In a moment of panic, we decided to look for a home.

I guess it’s time to get belligerent and make a scene, I agreed.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists
“Guys, I told them, we’re always getting drunk for no reason and spending too much money.”
Aysegül Savas, The Anthropologists