Erin > Erin's Quotes

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  • #1
    Jeffrey Eugenides
    “Some people majored in English to prepare for law school. Others became journalists. The smartest guy in the honors program, Adam Vogel, a child of academics, was planning on getting a Ph.D. and becoming an academic himself. That left a large contingent of people majoring in English by default. Because they weren't left-brained enough for science, because history was too try, philosophy too difficult, geology too petroleum-oriented, and math too mathematical - because they weren't musical, artistic, financially motivated, or really all that smart, these people were pursuing university degrees doing something no different from what they'd done in first grade: reading stories. English was what people who didn't know what to major in majored in.”
    Jeffrey Eugenides, The Marriage Plot

  • #2
    Jeffrey Eugenides
    “But, like anyone in love, Madeleine believed that her own relationship was different from every other relationship, immune from typical problems.”
    Jeffrey Eugenides, The Marriage Plot

  • #3
    Oscar Wilde
    “Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.”
    Oscar Wilde

  • #4
    Alain de Botton
    “Most of what makes a book 'good' is that we are reading it at the right moment for us.”
    Alain de Botton

  • #5
    Roland Barthes
    “...language is never innocent.”
    Roland Barthes

  • #6
    Roland Barthes
    “To try to write love is to confront the muck of language; that region of hysteria where language is both too much and too little, excessive (by the limitless expansion of the ego, by emotive submersion) and impoverished (by the codes on which love diminishes and levels it).”
    Roland Barthes, A Lover's Discourse: Fragments

  • #7
    Roland Barthes
    “I am simultaneously and contradictorily both happy and unhappy: 'to succeed' or 'to fail' have for me only ephemeral, contingent meanings (this does not stop my desires and sorrows from being violent ones); what impels me, secretly and obstinately, is not tactical: I accept and I affirm, irrespective of the true and the false, of success and failure; I am withdrawn from all finality, I live according to chance...”
    Roland Barthes

  • #8
    Roland Barthes
    “The art of living has no history: it does not evolve: the pleasure which vanishes vanishes for good, there is no substitute for it. Other pleasures come, which replace nothing. No progress in pleasures, nothing but mutations.”
    Roland Barthes, Roland Barthes

  • #9
    Jean Baudrillard
    “But what if God himself can be simulated, that is to say can be reduced to signs that constitute faith? Then the whole system becomes weightless, it is no longer anything but a gigantic simulacrum - not unreal, but simulacrum, that is to say never exchanged for the real, but exchanged for itself, in an uninterrupted circuit without reference or circumference.”
    Jean Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulation



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