Evie > Evie's Quotes

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  • #1
    Roger Zelazny
    “Nobody steals books but your friends.”
    Roger Zelazny, The Guns of Avalon

  • #2
    Frank Herbert
    “I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain.”
    Frank Herbert, Dune

  • #3
    Frank Herbert
    “Seek freedom and become captive of your desires. Seek discipline and find your liberty.”
    Frank Herbert, Chapterhouse: Dune

  • #4
    Frank Herbert
    “There's hope left in these dusty chords. There's a song left in our rusty hearts. We are torn and frayed but love remains.”
    Frank Herbert

  • #5
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “We read books to find out who we are. What other people, real or imaginary, do and think and feel... is an essential guide to our understanding of what we ourselves are and may become.”
    Ursula K. LeGuin

  • #6
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “The trouble is that we have a bad habit, encouraged by pedants and sophisticates, of considering happiness as something rather stupid. Only pain is intellectual, only evil interesting. This is the treason of the artist; a refusal to admit the banality of evil and the terrible boredom of pain.”
    Ursula K. LeGuin, The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas

  • #7
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “There have been great societies that did not use the wheel, but there have been no societies that did not tell stories.”
    ursula le guin

  • #8
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “Gradually the healing took place, seeming as it always does that it wasn't taking place.”
    Ursula K. LeGuin

  • #9
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “To see that your life is a story while you're in the middle of living it may be a help to living it well.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin, Gifts

  • #10
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “The use of imaginative fiction is to deepen your understanding of your world, and your fellow men, and your own feelings, and your destiny.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin, The Language of the Night: Essays on Fantasy and Science Fiction

  • #11
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “If one believes that words are acts, as I do, then one must hold writers responsible for what their words do.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin, Dancing at the Edge of the World: Thoughts on Words, Women, Places

  • #12
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “In its silence, a book is a challenge: it can't lull you with surging music or deafen you with screeching laugh tracks or fire gunshots in your living room; you have to listen to it in your head. A book won't move your eyes for you the way images on a screen do. It won't move your mind unless you give it your mind, or your heart unless you put your heart in it ... To read a story well is to follow it, to act it, to feel it, to become it--everything short of writing it, in fact. Reading is not interactive with a set of rules or options, as games are; reading is actual collaboration with the writer's mind. No wonder not everyone is up to it.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin

  • #13
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “Change is freedom, change is life.

    It's always easier not to think for oneself. Find a nice safe hierarchy and settle in. Don't make changes, don't risk disapproval, don't upset your syndics. It's always easiest to let yourself be governed.

    There's a point, around age twenty, when you have to choose whether to be like everybody else the rest of your life, or to make a virtue of your peculiarities.

    Those who build walls are their own prisoners. I'm going to go fulfil my proper function in the social organism. I'm going to go unbuild walls.”
    Ursula Le Guin, The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia

  • #14
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “Fantasy is not antirational, but pararational; not realistic but surrealistic, a heightening of reality. In Freud's terminology, it employs primary not secondary process thinking. It employs archetypes which, as Jung warned us, are dangerous things. Fantasy is nearer to poetry, to mysticism, and to insanity than naturalistic fiction is. It is a wilderness, and those who go there should not feel too safe.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin

  • #15
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “He was appalled by the examination system, when it was explained to him, he could not imagine a greater detterent to the natural wish to learn than this pattern of cramming in information and disgorging it on demand.”
    Ursula K. Le guin, The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia

  • #16
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “A profound love between two people involves, after all, the power and chance of doing profound hurt.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin, The Left Hand of Darkness

  • #17
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “To see a candle's light one must take it into a dark place.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin

  • #18
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “When he found that the administrators were upset, he laughed. “Do they expect students not to be anarchists?” he said. “What else can the young be? When you are on the bottom, you must organize from the bottom up”
    Ursula K. Le Guin, The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia

  • #19
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “No, I don't mean love, when I say patriotism. I mean fear. The fear of the other. And its expressions are political, not poetical: hate, rivalry, aggression.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin, The Left Hand of Darkness

  • #20
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “Hardly anybody ever writes anything nice about introverts. Extroverts rule. This is rather odd when you realise that about nineteen writers out of twenty are introverts. We are been taught to be ashamed of not being 'outgoing'. But a writer's job is ingoing.”
    Ursula K. LeGuin

  • #21
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “In many college English courses the words “myth” and “symbol” are given a tremendous charge of significance. You just ain’t no good unless you can see a symbol hiding, like a scared gerbil, under every page. And in many creative writing course the little beasts multiply, the place swarms with them. What does this Mean? What does that Symbolize? What is the Underlying Mythos? Kids come lurching out of such courses with a brain full of gerbils. And they sit down and write a lot of empty pomposity, under the impression that that’s how Melville did it.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin, The Language of the Night: Essays on Fantasy and Science Fiction

  • #22
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    “Without war there are no heroes."

    "What harm would that be?"

    "Oh, Lavinia, what a woman's question that is.”
    Ursula K. Le Guin, Lavinia

  • #23
    Andrea Dworkin
    “Woman is not born: she is made. In the making, her humanity is destroyed. She becomes symbol of this, symbol of that: mother of the earth, slut of the universe; but she never becomes herself because it is forbidden for her to do so.”
    Andrea Dworkin

  • #24
    Andrea Dworkin
    “I don’t believe rape is inevitable or natural. If I did, I would have no reason to be here. If I did, my political practice would be different than it is. Have you ever wondered why we [women] are not just in armed combat against you? It’s not because there’s a shortage of kitchen knives in this country. It is because we believe in your humanity, against all the evidence.”
    Andrea Dworkin

  • #25
    Andrea Dworkin
    “The essence of oppression is that one is defined from the outside by those who define themselves as superior by criteria of their own choice.”
    Andrea Dworkin

  • #26
    Andrea Dworkin
    “Feminism is hated because women are hated. Antifeminism is a direct expression of misogyny; it is the political defense of woman hating.”
    Andrea Dworkin, Right-Wing Women

  • #27
    Andrea Dworkin
    “Men have constructed female sexuality and in so doing have annihilated the chance for sexual intelligence in women. Sexual intelligence cannot live in the shallow, predestined sexuality men have counterfeiteed for women.”
    Andrea Dworkin

  • #28
    Andrea Dworkin
    “...each day I sit down in purposeful concentration to write in a notebook, some sentences on a buried truth, an unnamed reality, things that happened but are denied. It is hard to describe the stillness it takes, the difficulty of this act. It requires an almost perfect concentration which I am trying to learn and there is no way to learn it that is spelled out anywhere or so I can understand it but I have a sense that it's completely simply, on the order of being able to sit still and keep your mind dead center in you without apology or fear. I squirm after some time but it ain't boredom, it's fear of what's possible, how much you can know if you can be quiet enough and simple enough. I move around, my mind wanders, I lose the ability to take words and roll them through my brain, move with them into their interiors, feel their colors, touch what's under them, where they come from long ago and way back. I get frightened seeing what's in my own mind if words get put to it. There's a light there, it's bright, it's wide, it could make you blind if you look direct into it and so I turn away, afraid; I get frightened and I run and the only way to run is to abandon the process altogether or compromise it beyond recognition. I think about Celine sitting with his shit, for instance; I don't know why he didn't run, he should've. It's a quality you have to have of being near mad and at the same time so quiet in your heart that you could pass for a spiritual warrior; you could probably break things with the power in your mind. You got to be able to stand it, because it's a powerful and disturbing light, not something easy and kind, it comes through your head to make its way onto the page and you get fucking scared so your mind runs away, it wanders, it gets distracted, it buckles, it deserts, it takes a Goddamn freight train if it can find one, it wants calming agents and sporifics, and you mask that you are betraying the brightest and the best light you will ever see, you are betraying the mind that can be host to it...

    ...Your mind does stupid tricks to mask that you are betraying something of grave importance. It wanders so you won't notice that you are deserting your own life, abandoning it to triviality and garbage, how you are too fucking afraid to use your own brain for what it's for, which is to be a host to the light, to use it, to focus it; let it shine and carry the burden of what is illuminated, everything buried there; the light's scarier than anything it shows, the pure, direct experience of it in you as if your mind ain't the vegetable thing it's generally conceived to be or the nightmare thing you know it to be but a capacity you barely imagined, real; overwhelming and real, pushing you out to the edge of ecstasy and knowing and then do you fall or do you jump or do you fly?”
    Andrea Dworkin, Mercy

  • #29
    Andrea Dworkin
    “If you want a definition of what a coward is, it’s needing to push a whole class of people down so that you can walk on top of them.”
    Andrea Dworkin, Life and Death

  • #30
    Andrea Dworkin
    “Feminists know that if women are paid equal wages for equal work, women will gain sexual as well as economic independence. But feminists have refused to face the fact that in a woman-hating social system, women will never be paid equal wages. Men in all their institutions of power are sustained by the sex labor and sexual subordination of women. The sex labor of women must be maintained; and systematic low wages for sex-neutral work effectively force women to sell sex to survive. The economic system that pays women lower wages than it pays men actually punishes women for working outside marriage or prostitution, since women work hard for low wages and still must sell sex. The economic system that punishes women for working outside the bedroom by paying low wages contributes significantly to women's perception that the sexual serving of men is a necessary part of any woman's life: or how else could she live? Feminists appear to think that equal pay for equal work is a simple reform, whereas it no reform at all; it is revolution. Feminists have refused to face the fact that equal pay for equal work is impossible as long as men rule women, and right-wing women have refused to forget it.”
    Andrea Dworkin



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