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Dæmon Voices Dæmon Voices by Philip Pullman
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Dæmon Voices Quotes Showing 1-22 of 22
“Eve was tempted not by wealth or love but by knowledge.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“Stories aren't made of language: they're made of something else. A little earlier I said that stories were about life; perhaps they're made of life.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“No literary work longer than a haiku is going to be entirely without faults.”
Philip Pullman, Daemon Voices: On Stories and Storytelling
“The mind has plenty of ways of preventing you from writing, and paralysing self-consciousness is a good one. The only thing to do is ignore it, and remember what Vincent van Gogh said in one of his letters about the painter's fear of the blank canvas - the canvas, he said, is far more afraid of the painter.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“Every sentence I write is surrounded by the ghosts of the sentences I could have written at that point, but chose not to.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“Good intentions never wrote a story worth reading.”
Philip Pullman, Daemon Voices: On Stories and Storytelling
“We shouldn't be afraid of the obvious, because stories are about life, and life is full of obvious things like food and sleep and love and courage which you don't stop needing just because you're a good reader.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“The meaning of one thing is its connection with another;”
Philip Pullman, Daemon Voices: On Stories and Storytelling
“Novels and stories are not arguments; they set out not to convince, but to beguile.”
Philip Pullman, Daemon Voices: On Stories and Storytelling
“When you write a story you're not trying to prove anything or demonstrate the merits of this case or the flaws in that. At its simplest, what you're doing is making up some interesting events, putting them in the best order to show the connections between them and recounting them as clearly as you can.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“Of all the dangers that threaten us at the beginning of the third millennium - the degradation of the environment, the increasing undemocratic power of the great corporations, the continuing threats to peace in regions full of decaying nuclear weapons, and so on - one of the biggest dangers of all comes from fundamentalist religion....From the Christian conservatives in the USA to the Taliban in Afghanistan.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“The commercial pressures, the forces urging us to buy and discard and buy again. When everything in public life has a logo attached to it, when every public space is disfigured with advertisements, when nothing if public value and importance can take place without commercial sponsorship, when schools and hospitals have to act as if their guiding principle were market forces rather than human need,..., when citizens become consumers and clients, patients, guests, students and passengers are all flattened into customers, what price the school of morals? The answer is: what it would fetch in the market, and not a penny more.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“The classroom is a torture chamber , interrogating poetry until it confesses.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“I was condemned to be burnt myself recently, or my books were. An article in the _Catholic Herald_ said that my _His Dark Materials_ was "far more worthy of the bonfire than Harry [Potter]"; it was "a million times more sinister." Naturally, I'm very proud of this distinction, and I asked the publishers to print it in the paperback of _The Subtle Knife_.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“But I haven’t mentioned the cheer relentlessness of modern life, the crowdedness, the incessant thumping music and braying voices, the near impossibility of finding solitude and silence and time to reflect. I haven’t mentioned the commercial pressures, the forces urging us to buy and discard and buy again. When everything in public life has a logo attached to it, when every public space is disfigured with advertisements, when nothing of public value and importance can take place without commercial sponsorship, when schools and hospitals have to act as if their guiding principle were market forces rather than human need, when adults and children alike are tempted to wear t-shirts with obscene words on them by the smirking little devices spelling the words wrongly, when citizens become consumers and clients; patients and guests, students and passengers are all flattened into customers, what price the school of morals? The answer is: what it would fetch in the market. And not a penny more. I haven’t mentioned the obsession with targets, and testing and tables; the management-driven and politics corrupted and all the clotted rubbish that so deforms the true work of schools. I haven’t mentioned something that might seem trivial but I think its importance is profound and rarely understood: that’s the difference between reading a story in a book and watching a story on a screen. It’s a psychological difference, not just a technical one. We need to take account of it and I fear we are not doing it, and the school of morals is suffering in result.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“Schools must take children to the theatre. This activity must be subsidised. Children should be able to join a youth theatre near where they live, and learn how to take part in every aspect of putting on a play. Places like that should be subsidised too. These things are not luxuries: they’re essential to our wellbeing.”
Philip Pullman, Daemon Voices: On Stories and Storytelling
“Wagner's gods and heroes are exactly like human beings, on a grand scale: every human virtue and every human temptation is there. Tolkien leaves a good half of them out. No one in Middle Earth has any sexual relations at all. I think their children must be delivered by post.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“This is the sort of thing that was probably meant by the phrase 'institutional racism' with reference to the police...a lot of the criticism of that came from people who thought that every police officer was thus being called a racist, but it was different from that...soldiers in a regiment are imbued with a sort of invisible ...feeling, which is again picked up by a hundred little example, some too small to see consciously...young officers see and hear their elders and superiors using language or making jokes, or overlooking remarks that they make, which have a racist tendency. The general assumption is that that's the way we, the force, the canteen, the people in uniform - us - that's the way we see things. It all resonates and gets amplified. And because a lot of this is subliminal and unconscious and never actually put into 'racist' words...it's easy to deny that it exists, and it is even easy to believe that it doesn't.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“The News of the World no longer exists. How nice to realise that even the most offensive things will eventually require a footnote to explain what they were.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“Should we storytellers make sure we pass on the experience of our own culture? Yes, of course. It's one of our prime duties. But should we only tell stories that reflect our own background? Should we refrain from telling stories that originated elsewhere, on the grounds that we don't have the right to annex the experience of others? Absolutely not. A culture that never encounters any others becomes first inward-looking, and then stagnant, and then rotten. We are responsible for bringing fresh streams of story into our own cultures from all over the world, and welcoming experience from every quarter, and offering our own experience in return.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“I wish I’d seen, as I was writing it, that it would be much more effective if he motivation were love; that he does these terrible things out of sheer compassion. He’s killing people in order to save their souls....It’s much more interesting, because much more realistic, when there’s a struggle between different goods.”
Philip Pullman, Dæmon Voices
“Or when a good character does something bad? It’s probably better to think about good or bad actions rather than good or bad characters. People are complicated.”
Philip Pullman, Daemon Voices: On Stories and Storytelling