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Robert Grudin

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Robert Grudin


Born
The United States

Grudin graduated from Harvard, and earned a Ph.D. in comparative literature from the University of California, Berkeley in 1969. He received a Guggenheim Fellowship for 1992-1993. Until 1998 he was a professor of English at the University of Oregon. He has written about many political and philosophical themes including liberty, determinism, and several others.

Average rating: 3.96 · 727 ratings · 112 reviews · 12 distinct worksSimilar authors
Time and the Art of Living

4.27 avg rating — 249 ratings — published 1982 — 6 editions
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Book

3.77 avg rating — 221 ratings — published 1992 — 8 editions
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The Grace of Great Things: ...

4.04 avg rating — 112 ratings — published 1990 — 6 editions
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Design and Truth

3.64 avg rating — 90 ratings — published 2010 — 7 editions
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On Dialogue: An Essay in Fr...

3.88 avg rating — 24 ratings — published 1996 — 3 editions
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American Vulgar: The Politi...

3.29 avg rating — 17 ratings — published 2006 — 3 editions
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The Most Amazing Thing

3.91 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 2001 — 2 editions
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Mighty Opposites: Shakespea...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 1979
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Book

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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[(Design and Truth )] [Auth...

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More books by Robert Grudin…
Quotes by Robert Grudin  (?)
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“We are not great connoisseurs of the two twilights. We miss the dawning, exclusably enough, by sleeping through it, and are as much strangers to the shadowless welling-up of day as to the hesitant return of consciousness in our slowly waking selves. But our obliviousness to evening twilight is less understandable. Why do we almost daily ignore a spectacle (and I do not mean sunset but rather the hour, more or less, afterward) that has a thousand tonalities, that alters and extends reality, that offers, more beautifully than anything man-made, a visual metaphor or peace? To say that it catches us at busy or tired moments won't do; for in temperate latitudes it varies by hours from solstice to solstice. Instead I suspect that we shun twilight because if offers two things which, as insecurely rational beings, we would rather not appreciate: the vision of irrevocable cosmic change (indeed, change into darkness), and a sense of deep ambiguity—of objects seeming to be more, less, other than we think them to be. We are noontime and midnight people, and such devoted camp-followers of certainly that we cannot endure seeing it mocked and undermined by nature.

There is a brief period of twilight of which I am especially fond, little more than a moment, when I see what seems to be color without light, followed by another brief period of light without color. The earlier period, like a dawn of night, calls up such sights as at all other times are hidden, wistful half-formless presences neither of day nor night, that draw up with them similar presences in the mind. ”
Robert Grudin, Time and the Art of Living

“Because we believe that one moment is more or less like the next, we lose touch with the essential urgency of the present, the fact that each passing moment is the one moment for the practice of freedom.”
Robert Grudin, Time and the Art of Living

“We struggle with, agonize over and bluster heroically about the great questions of life when the answers to most of these lie hidden in our attitude toward the thousand minor details of each day.”
Robert Grudin, Time and the Art of Living

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