The Marginalized Majority Quotes

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The Marginalized Majority: Claiming Our Power in a Post-Truth America The Marginalized Majority: Claiming Our Power in a Post-Truth America by Onnesha Roychoudhuri
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The Marginalized Majority Quotes Showing 1-2 of 2
“Like most Americans, I was raised to be a white man. I read William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway. I read F. Scott Fitzgerald and Charles Bukowski. I came to identify with the emotionally disengaged characters, the staccato sentences, the irreverent dirty old man voice. The books I read asked me to imagine the power I might have. I got a woman pregnant and then worried that they wouldn't get an abortion, tying me down forever when all I wanted to do was continue experiencing my freedom. I wrote poems about the absurdity of writing poems, enjoying the decadence of imagining my readers drinking in my disregard for them. Being likable, explaining myself to others were not prerequisites of protaganism. I watched women move, their hips and dresses, their lips on glasses, their breasts heaving, all that offered up to me to enjoy, to consume. The fact that I was a brown woman was not something that seemed immediately relevant when I was younger. I moved through the world with the sense that I would have the same kind of power as the protagonists I read and movies I watched.”
Onnesha Roychoudhuri, The Marginalized Majority: Claiming Our Power in a Post-Truth America
“But here's the thing about narcissistic idealogues: they don't respond to logic or dissuasion in the names of fact or reason. We could fact check him all day and night, but he wasn't playing by the rules of the game”
Onnesha Roychoudhuri, The Marginalized Majority: Claiming Our Power in a Post-Truth America