Ivy > Ivy's Quotes

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  • #1
    Thomas Pynchon
    “Such a captive maiden, having plenty of time to think, soon realizes that her tower, its height and architecture, are like her ego only incidental: that what really keeps her where she is is magic, anonymous and malignant, visited on her from outside and for no reason at all. Having no apparatus except gut fear and female cunning to examine this formless magic, to understand how it works, how to measure its field strength, count its lines of force, she may fall back on superstition, or take up a useful hobby like embroidery, or go mad, or marry a disk jockey. If the tower is everywhere and the knight of deliverance no proof against its magic, what else?”
    Thomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49

  • #2
    Aimé Césaire
    “At the end of capitalism, which is eager to outlive its day, there is Hitler. At the end of formal humanism and philosophic renunciation, there is Hitler.”
    Aimé Césaire, Discourse on Colonialism

  • #3
    Thomas Pynchon
    “In the buses all night she listened to transistor radios playing songs in the lower stretches of the Top 200, that would never become popular, whose melodies and lyrics would perish as if they had never been sung. A Mexican girl, trying to hear one of these through snarling static from the bus’s motor, hummed along as if she would remember it always, tracing post horns and hearts with a fingernail, in the haze of her breath on the window.”
    Thomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49

  • #4
    John Cassavetes
    “And so, that’s why I have a need for the characters to really analyze love, discuss it, kill it, destroy it, hurt each other, do all the stuff in that war, in that word-polemic and film-polemic of what life is. And the rest of the stuff doesn’t really interest me. It may interest other people, but I have a one-track mind. That’s all I’m interested in – love. And the lack of it. When it stops. And the pain that’s caused by loss of things that are taken away from us that we really need.”
    John Cassavetes
    tags: cinema

  • #5
    Tom Stoppard
    “There must have been a moment, at the beginning, where we could have said -- no. But somehow we missed it.”
    Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead

  • #6
    Tom Stoppard
    “Eternity is a terrible thought. I mean, where's it going to end?”
    Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead

  • #7
    Aimé Césaire
    “it is Nazism, yes, but that before they were its victims, they were its accomplices; that they tolerated that Nazism before it was inflicted on them, that they absolved it, shut their eyes to it, legitimized it, because, until then, it had been applied only to non-European peoples; that they have cultivated that Nazism, that they are responsible for it, and that before engulfing the whole edifice of Western, Christian civilization in its reddened waters, it oozes, seeps, and trickles from every crack.”
    Aimé Césaire, Discourse on Colonialism

  • #8
    Jean Rhys
    “If I was bound for hell, let it be hell. No more false heavens. No more damned magic.”
    Jean Rhys, Wide Sargasso Sea

  • #9
    Orson Welles
    “If you want a happy ending, that depends, of course, on where you stop your story.”
    Orson Welles

  • #10
    Joan Lindsay
    “Everything begins and ends at exactly the right time and place.”
    Joan Lindsay, Picnic at Hanging Rock

  • #11
    Samuel Beckett
    “I say to myself—sometimes, Clov, you must learn to suffer better than that if you want them to weary of punishing you—one day. I say to myself—sometimes, Clov, you must be better than that if you want them to let you go—one day. But I feel too old, and too far, to form new habits. Good, it'll never end, I'll never go.”
    Samuel Beckett, Endgame

  • #12
    Alan             Moore
    “Nothing ends, Adrian. Nothing ever ends.”
    Alan Moore, Watchmen

  • #13
    Barack Obama
    “Looking back, it’s embarrassing to recognize the degree to which my intellectual curiosity those first two years of college paralleled the interests of various women I was attempting to get to know: Marx and Marcuse so I had something to say to the long-legged socialist who lived in my dorm; Fanon and Gwendolyn Brooks for the smooth-skinned sociology major who never gave me a second look; Foucault and Woolf for the ethereal bisexual who wore mostly black. As a strategy for picking up girls, my pseudo-intellectualism proved mostly worthless; I found myself in a series of affectionate but chaste friendships.”
    Barack Obama, A Promised Land

  • #14
    Jürgen Moltmann
    “When God becomes man in Jesus of Nazareth, he not only enters into the finitude of man, but in his death on the cross also enters into the situation of man's godforsakenness. In Jesus he does not die the natural death of a finite being, but the violent death of the criminal on the cross, the death of complete abandonment by God. The suffering in the passion of Jesus is abandonment, rejection by God, his Father. God does not become a religion, so that man participates in him by corresponding religious thoughts and feelings. God does not become a law, so that man participates in him through obedience to a law. God does not become an ideal, so that man achieves community with him through constant striving. He humbles himself and takes upon himself the eternal death of the godless and the godforsaken, so that all the godless and the godforsaken can experience communion with him.”
    Jürgen Moltmann, The Crucified God: The Cross of Christ As the Foundation and Criticism of Christian Theology



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