James Maconochie > James's Quotes

Showing 1-30 of 1,580
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 52 53
sort by

  • #1
    Jean Baudrillard
    “This false distance is present everywhere: in spy films, in Godard, in modern advertising, which uses it continually as a cultural allusion. It is not really clear in the end whether this 'cool' smile is the smile of humour or that of commercial complicity. This is also the case with pop, and its smile ultimately encapsulates all its ambiguity: it is not the smile of critical distance, but the smile of collusion”
    Jean Baudrillard, The Consumer Society: Myths and Structures

  • #2
    Murray Bookchin
    “Capitalism, far from affording "privileges" to the middle classes, tends to degrade them more abjectly than any other stratum in society. The system deploys its capacity for abundance to bring the petty bourgeois into complicity with his own oppression—first by turning him into a commodity, into an object for sale in the marketplace; next by assimilating his very wants to the commodity nexus. Tyrannized as he is by every vicissitude of bourgeois society, the whole personality of the petty bourgeois vibrates with insecurity. His soporifics—commodities and more commodities—are his very poison. In this sense there is nothing more oppressive than "privilege" today, for the deepest recesses of the "privileged" man's psyche are fair game for exploitation and domination.”
    Murray Bookchin, Post-Scarcity Anarchism

  • #3
    Murray Bookchin
    “The phrase "consumer society" complements the description of the present social order as an "industrial society." Needs are tailored by the mass media to create a public demand for utterly useless commodities, each carefully engineered to deteriorate after a predetermined period of time. The plundering of the human spirit by the marketplace is paralleled by the plundering of the earth by capital.”
    Murray Bookchin, Post-Scarcity Anarchism

  • #4
    Dean Cavanagh
    “The end result of a culture of pure consumption is a mountain of pure shit”
    Dean Cavanagh

  • #5
    Hope Jahren
    “Convincing people to examine their energy use is like trying to get them to quit smoking or eat more healthfully: they already know that they should do it, but there is a billion-dollar industry working round-the-clock, inventing new ways to make sure they don't.”
    Hope Jahren, The Story of More: How We Got to Climate Change and Where to Go from Here

  • #6
    Naomi Klein
    “Climate change demands that we consume less, but being consumers is all we know. Climate change is not a problem that can be solved simply by changing what we buy---a hybrid instead of an SUV, some carbon offsets when we get on a plane. At it's core, it is a crisis born of overconsumption by the comparatively wealthy, which means the world's most manic consumers are going to have to consume less so that others can have enough to life.
    The problem is not "human nature," as we are so often told. We weren't born having to shop this much, and we have, in our recent past, been just as happy (in many cases happier) consuming significantly less. The problem is the inflated role that consumption has come to play in our particular era.
    Late capitalism teaches us to create ourselves through our consumer choices: shopping is how we form our identities, find community, and express ourselves. Thus, telling people they can't shop as much as they want to because the planet's support systems are overburdened can be understood as a personal attack, asking to telling them they cannot truly be themselves. This is likely why, of environmentalism's original "three Rs" (reduce, reuse, recycle), only the third one has ever gotten any traction, since it allows us to keep on shopping as long as we put the refuse in the right box. The other two, which require that we consume less, were pretty much dead on arrival.”
    Naomi Klein, On Fire: The Case for the Green New Deal

  • #7
    G.A. Cohen
    “The promise of abundance is not an endless flow of goods but a sufficiency produced with a minimum of unpleasant exertion.”
    G.A. Cohen

  • #8
    Wilhelm Röpke
    “As we approach the limits of reasonable consumption, the cult of the standard of life must end up in disillusionment and eventual repugnance.”
    Wilhelm Röpke, A Humane Economy: The Social Framework of the Free Market

  • #9
    Italo Calvino
    “Hence that state of mind at once gloomy and euphoric which one associates with carrying out the rubbish; and the way we see the men who go by emptying the bins into their pulping truck not just as emissaries for the chthonic world, gravediggers of the inanimate, Charons of a beyond of greasy paper and rusty tin, but as angels too, as indispensable mediators between ourselves and the heaven of ideas in which we undeservedly soar (or imagine we soar) and which can exist only in so far as we are not overwhelmed by the waste which every act of living incessantly produces (even the act of thinking: these thoughts of mine that you are reading being all that been salvaged from the scores of sheets of paper now crumpled up in the bin), heralds of a possible salvation beyond the destruction inherent in all production and consumption, liberators from the weight of time’s detritus, ponderous dark angels of lightness and clarity.”
    Italo Calvino, The Road to San Giovanni

  • #10
    Steven Pressfield
    “This is the other secret that real artists know and wannabe writers don’t. When we sit down each day and do our work, power concentrates around us. The Muse takes note of our dedication. She approves. We have earned favor in her sight. When we sit down and work, we become like a magnetized rod that attracts iron filings. Ideas come. Insights accrete.”
    Steven Pressfield, The War of Art

  • #11
    Sophocles
    “I have no desire to suffer twice, in reality and then in retrospect.”
    Sophocles, Oedipus Rex

  • #12
    G.K. Chesterton
    “The whole modern world has divided itself into Conservatives and Progressives. The business of Progressives is to go on making mistakes. The business of Conservatives is to prevent mistakes from being corrected. Even when the revolutionist might himself repent of his revolution, the traditionalist is already defending it as part of his tradition. Thus we have two great types -- the advanced person who rushes us into ruin, and the retrospective person who admires the ruins. He admires them especially by moonlight, not to say moonshine. Each new blunder of the progressive or prig becomes instantly a legend of immemorial antiquity for the snob. This is called the balance, or mutual check, in our Constitution.”
    G.K. Chesterton

  • #13
    Milan Kundera
    “The Greek word for "return" is nostos. Algos means "suffering." So nostalgia is the suffering caused by an unappeased yearning to return.”
    Milan Kundera, Ignorance

  • #14
    Marya Hornbacher
    “You never come back, not all the way. Always there is an odd distance between you and the people you love and the people you meet, a barrier thin as the glass of a mirror, you never come all the way out of the mirror; you stand, for the rest of your life, with one foot in this world and no one in another, where everything is upside down and backward and sad.”
    Marya Hornbacher, Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia

  • #15
    Gabriel García Márquez
    “I discovered that my obsession for having each thing in the right place, each subject at the right time, each word in the right style, was not the well-deserved reward of an ordered mind but just the opposite: a complete system of pretense invented by me to hide the disorder of my nature. I discovered that I am not disciplined out of virtue but as a reaction to my negligence, that I appear generous in order to conceal my meanness, that I pass myself off as prudent because I am evil-minded, that I am conciliatory in order not to succumb to my repressed rage, that I am punctual only to hide how little I care about other people’s time. I learned, in short, that love is not a condition of the spirit but a sign of the zodiac.”
    Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Memories of My Melancholy Whores

  • #16
    Jasmine Warga
    “Anyone who has actually been that sad can tell you that there's nothing beautiful or literary or mysterious about depression.”
    Jasmine Warga, My Heart and Other Black Holes

  • #17
    Marya Hornbacher
    “When you are mad, mad like this, you don't know it. Reality is what you see. When what you see shifts, departing from anyone else's reality, it's still reality to you.”
    Marya Hornbacher, Madness: A Bipolar Life

  • #18
    Laurie Halse Anderson
    “I am angry that I starved my brain and that I sat shivering in my bed at night instead of dancing or reading poetry or eating ice cream or kissing a boy...”
    Laurie Halse Anderson, Wintergirls

  • #19
    Laurie Halse Anderson
    “I failed eating, failed drinking, failed not cutting myself into shreds. Failed friendship. Failed sisterhood and daughterhood. Failed mirrors and scales and phone calls. Good thing I'm stable. ”
    Laurie Halse Anderson, Wintergirls

  • #20
    Simone de Beauvoir
    “To lose confidence in one’s body is to lose confidence in oneself.”
    Simone de Beauvoir

  • #21
    Rumer Godden
    “In me you exist,' says the house.”
    Rumer Godden, Take Three Tenses: A Fugue in Time

  • #22
    Glen Duncan
    “She understood the genre constraints, the decencies were supposed to be observing. The morally cosy vision allows the embrace of monstrosity only as a reaction to suffering or as an act of rage against the Almighty. Vampire interviewee Louis is in despair at his brother’s death when he accepts Lestat’s offer. Frankenstein’s creature is driven to violence by the violence done to him. Even Lucifer’s rebellion emerges from the agony of injured price. The message is clear: By all means become an abomination—but only while unhinged by grief or wrath.”
    Glen Duncan, The Last Werewolf

  • #23
    “But we are all here … together. Well, not really. We are a collection of “places without a place,” too amorphous to be concentrated, but too autonomous to create a counter-power to the neo/post-liberal State and Capital. We struggle to detach ourselves from the epistemography and ontology of a form of life to which we relate with nothing but mutual disdain. And yet, for most of us, as things continue to fall apart around us; as the State becomes the dystopia that only our most pessimistic and paranoid writers could have imagined; as even the sick, maimed, mediocre, scared, bored, herd animals that we have become begin to recognize the bounds of our rangelands – for most of us, for the too helplessly modern, perhaps, there will never be enough reasons to decide to fight our enemies to the death.”
    Mark Dyal

  • #24
    Kevin Kelly
    “I have not met a speculative utopia I would want to live in. I’d be bored in utopia. Dystopias, their dark opposites, are a lot more entertaining.”
    Kevin Kelly, The Inevitable: Understanding the 12 Technological Forces That Will Shape Our Future

  • #25
    John   Gray
    “Humans cannot live without illusions. For the men and women of today, an irrational faith in progress may be the only antidote to nihilism. Without the hope that the future will be better than the past, they could not go on.”
    John Gray, Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals

  • #26
    John   Gray
    “We think our actions express our decisions. But in nearly all of our life, willing decides nothing. We cannot wake up or fall asleep, remember or forget our dreams, summon or banish our thoughts, by deciding to do so. When we greet someone on the street we just act, and there is no actor standing behind what we do. Our acts are end points in long sequences of unconscious responses. They arise from a structure of habits and skills that is almost infinitely complicated. Most of our life in enacted without conscious awareness. Nor can it be made conscious. No degree of self-awareness can make us self-transparent.”
    John Gray, Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals

  • #27
    John   Gray
    “Today, for the mass of humanity, science and technology embody 'miracle, mystery, and authority'. Science promises that the most ancient human fantasies will at last be realized. Sickness and ageing will be abolished; scarcity and poverty will be no more; the species will become immortal. Like Christianity in the past, the modern cult of science lives on the hope of miracles. But to think that science can transform the human lot is to believe in magic. Time retorts to the illusions of humanism with the reality: frail, deranged, undelivered humanity. Even as it enables poverty to be diminished and sickness to be alleviated, science will be used to refine tyranny and perfect the art of war.”
    John Gray, Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals

  • #28
    John   Gray
    “Humans think they are free, conscious beings, when in truth they are deluded animals. At the same time they never cease trying to escape from what they imagine themselves to be. Their religions are attempts to be rid of a freedom they have never possessed. In the twentieth century, the utopias of Right and Left served the same function. Today, when politics is unconvincing even as entertainment, science has taken on the role of mankind's deliverer.”
    John Gray, Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals

  • #29
    John   Gray
    “It is a strange fancy to suppose that science can bring reason to an irrational world, when all it can ever do is give another twist to a normal madness.”
    John Gray, Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals

  • #30
    John   Gray
    “Nothing is more alien to the present age than idleness. If we think of resting from our labours, it is only in order to return to them.
    In thinking so highly of work we are aberrant. Few other cultures have ever done so. For nearly all of history and all prehistory, work was an indignity.”
    John Gray, Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals



Rss
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 52 53