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  3. Susan Sontag
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The truth is always something that is told, not something that is known. If there were no speaking or writing, there would be no truth about anything. There would only be what is.

em The Benefactor
knowledge wisdom ignorance truth-telling

That's the source of the meditation on death I've carried in my heart all my life.

death

A writer, I think, is someone who pays attention to the world.", Frankfurt Book Fair, October 12, 2003]

writing writers attention observation perspicacity

The writer is either a practicing recluse or a delinquent, guilt-ridden one--or both. Usually both.

writing

Writing is a mysterious activity.

writing self-expression

If I thought that what I'm doing when I write is expressing myself, I'd junk the typewriter. Writing is a much more complicated activity that that.

writing

My urge to write is an urge not to self-expressionism but to self-transcendence. My work is both bigger and smaller than I am.

writing

Do stuff. be clenched, curious. Not waiting for inspiration's shove or society's kiss on your forehead. Pay attention. It's all about paying attention. attention is vitality. It connects you with others. It makes you eager. stay eager.

inspiration intelligence action connection attention observation vitality concentration eagerness

Religion is probably, after sex, the second oldest resource which human beings have available to them for blowing their mind.

em Styles of Radical Will
religion sex fiction literary-criticism pornography

All photographs are memento mori. To take a photograph is to participate in another person’s (or thing’s) mortality, vulnerability, mutability. Precisely by slicing out this moment and freezing it, all photographs testify to time’s relentless melt.

time photography

Time eventually positions most photographs, even the most amateurish, at the level of art.

time photography

My library is an archive of longings.

em As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964-1980
longing books library

Science fiction films are not about science. They are about disaster, which is one of the oldest subjects of art.

books reading literature science-fiction sci-fi disaster

All memory is individual, unreproducible - it dies with each person. What is called collective memory is not a remembering but a stipulating: that this is important, and this is the story about how it happened, with the pictures that lock the story in our minds.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Is there an antidote to the perennial seductiveness of war? And is this a question a woman is more likely to pose than a man? (Probably yes.)

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Narratives can make us understand. Photographs do something else: they haunt us.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Photographs objectify: they turn an event or a person into something that can be possessed.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

No "we" should be taken for granted when the subject is looking at other people's pain.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

It is intolerable to have one's sufferings twinned with anybody else's.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

We" - this "we" is everyone who has never experienced anything like what they went through - don't understand. We don't get it. We truly can't imagine what it was like. We can't imagine how dreadful, how terrifying war is; and how normal it becomes. Can't understand, can't imagine. That's what every soldier, and every journalist and aid worker and independent observer who has put in time under fire, and had the luck to elude the death that struck down others nearby, stubbornly feels. And they are right.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Up to a point, the weight and seriousness of such photographs survive better in a book, where one can look privately, linger over the pictures, without talking. Still, at some moment the book will be closed. The strong emotion will become a transient one.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

It is felt that there is something morally wrong with the abstract of reality offered by photography; that one has no right to experience the suffering of others at a distance, denuded of its raw power; that we pay too high a human (or moral) price for those hitherto admired qualities of vision - the standing back from the aggressiveness of the world which frees us for observation and for elective attention.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Perhaps too much value is assigned to memory, not enough to thinking. Remembering is an ethical act, has ethical value in and of itself. Memory is, achingly, the only relation we can have with the dead.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontagntag

To set their sufferings alongside the sufferings of another people was to compare them (which hell was worse?), demoting Sarajevo's martyrdom to a mere instance.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Compassion is an unstable emotion. It needs to be translated into action, or it withers.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

It is a view of suffering, of the pain of others, that is rooted in religious thinking, which links pain to sacrifice, sacrifice to exaltation - a view that could not be more alien to a modern sensibility, which regards suffering as something that is a mistake or an accident or a crime. Something to be fixed. Something to be refused. Something that makes one feel powerless.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

One can feel obliged to look at phototgraphs that record great cruelties and crimes. One should feel obliged to think about what it means to look at them, about the capacity actually to assimilate what they show. Not all reactions to these pictures are under the supervision of reason and conscience.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

With time, many staged photographs turn back into historical evidence, albeit of an impure kind - like most historical evidence.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

What is odd is not that so many of the iconic news photos of the past, including some of the best-remembered pictures from the Second World War, appear to have been staged. It is that we are surprised to learn they were staged and always disappointed.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

In fact, there are many uses of the innumerable opportunities a modern life supplies for regarding - at a distance, through the medium of photography - other people's pain.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

The memory of war, however, like all memory, is mostly local.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Perhaps the only people with the right to look at images of suffering of this extreme order are those who could do something to alleviate it - say, the surgeons at the military hospital where the photograph was taken - or those who could learn from it. The rest of us are voyeurs, whether or not we mean to be.

books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Photographs that depict suffering shouldn't be beautiful, as captions shouldn't moralize.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Making suffering loom larger, by globalizing it, may spur people to feel they ought to "care" more.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

Often something looks, or is felt to look, "better" in a photograph. Indeed, it is one of the functions of photography to improve the normal appearance of things. (Hence, one is always disappointed by a photograph that is not flattering.)

em Regarding the Pain of Others
books book-quotes regarding-the-pain-of-others susan-sontag

I have loved people passionately whom I wouldn't have slept with for anything, but I think that's something else. That's friendship -- love, which can be a tremendously passionate emotion, and it can be tender and involve a desire to hug or whatever. But it certainly doesn't mean you want to take off your clothes with that person. But certain friendships can be erotic. Oh, I think friendship is very erotic, but it isn't necessarily sexual. I think all my relationships are erotic: I can't imagine being fond of somebody I don't want to touch or hug, so therefore there's always an erotic aspect to some extent.

love friendship eroticism

I don’t care about someone being intelligent; any situation between people, when they are really human with each other, produces ‘intelligence.

people intelligence humans

To the militant, identity is everything.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
war

Abuse of the military metaphor may be inevitable in a capitalist society, a society that increasingly restricts the scope and credibility of appeals to ethical principle, in which it is thought foolish not to subject one's actions to the calculus of self-interest and profitability. War-making is one of the few activities that people are not supposed to view 'realistically'; that is, with an eye to expense and practical outcome. In all-out war, expenditure is all-out, unprudent--war being defined as as an emergency in which no sacrifice is excessive.

em Illness as Metaphor & AIDS and Its Metaphors
war capitalism

Literature was the passport to enter a larger life; that is, the zone of freedom. Literature was freedom. Especially in a time in which the values of reading and inwardness are so strenuously challenged, literature is freedom.

freedom reading literature

The last achievement of the serious admirer is to stop immediately putting to work the energies aroused by, filling up the space opened by, what is admired. Thereby talented admirers give themselves permission to breathe, to breathe more deeply. But for that it is necessary to go beyond avidity; to identify with something beyond achievement, beyond the gathering of power.

em Under the Sign of Saturn: Essays
freedom admiration influence living-in-art

The shock of photographed atrocities wears off with repeated viewings, just as the surprise and bemusement felt the first time one sees a pornographic movie wear off after one sees a few more.

humour photography pornography

The likelihood that your acts of resistance cannot stop the injustice does not exempt you from acting in what you sincerely and reflectively hold to be the best interests of your community.

em At the Same Time: Essays and Speeches
change bravery society trial resistance

I must change my life so that I can live it, not wait for it.

life waiting change

Interpretation is the revenge of the intellectual upon art.

art intelligence scholarship criticism scholars interpretation critique art-criticism

But the very question of whether photography is or is not an art is essentially a misleading one. Although photography generates works that can be called art --it requires subjectivity, it can lie, it gives aesthetic pleasure-- photography is not, to begin with, an art form at all. Like language, it is a medium in which works of art (among other things) are made. Out of language, one can make scientific discourse, bureaucratic memoranda, love letters, grocery lists, and Balzac's Paris. Out of photography, one can make passport pictures, weather photographs, pornographic pictures, X-rays, wedding pictures, and Atget's Paris. Photography is not an art like, say, painting and poetry. Although the activities of some photographers conform to the traditional notion of a fine art, the activity of exceptionally talented individuals producing discrete objects that have value in themselves, form the beginning photography has also lent itself to that notion of art which says that art is obsolete. The power of photography --and its centrality in present aesthetic concerns-- is that it confirms both ideas of art. But the way in which photography renders art obsolete is, in the long run, stronger.

em On Photography
art photography obsolete

The only interesting ideas are heresies

em Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
art culture

Read a lot. Expect something big, something exalting or deepening from a book. No book is worth reading that isn't worth re-reading.

reading re-reading

Most of my reading is rereading.

em Conversations with Susan Sontag
reading

Mozart, Pascal, Boolean algebra, Shakespeare, parliamentary government, baroque churches, Newton, the emancipation of women, Kant, Balanchine ballets, et al. don’t redeem what this particular civilization has wrought upon the world. The white race is the cancer of human history.

shakespeare history racism race mozart jewish

10 percent of any population is cruel, no matter what, and 10 percent is merciful, no matter what, and the remaining 80 percent can be moved in either direction.

humanity mercy mankind cruelty

To suffer is one thing; another thing is living with the photographed images of suffering, which does not necessarily strengthen conscience and the ability to be compassionate. It can also corrupt them. Once one has seen such images, one has started down the road of seeing more - and more. Images transfix. Images anesthetize.

em On Photography
suffering compassion humanity conscience photography images

One cannot use the life to interpret the work. But One can use the work to interpret the life.

em Under the Sign of Saturn: Essays
life work intrepretation

Alone, alone. I am alone – I ache … Yet for the first time, despite all the anguish and the reality problems, I’m here. I feel tranquil, whole, ADULT.

em As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964-1980
peace loneliness yearning growing-pains

I am scared, numbed from the marital wars - that deadly, deadening combat which is the opposite, the antithesis of the sharp painful struggles of lovers. Lovers fight with knives and whips, husbands and wives poisoned marshmallows, sleeping pills, and wet blankets.

em Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
marriage marital-wars

Love words, agonize over sentences. And pay attention to the world.

philosophy words writing world

Self-respect. It would make me lovable. And it's the secret to good sex.

em As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964-1980
life love inspirational sex

Sisyphus, I. I cling to my rock, you don’t have to chain me. Stand back! I roll it up—up, up. And … down we go. I knew that would happen. See, I’m on my feet again. See, I’m starting to roll it up again. Don’t try to talk me out of it. Nothing, nothing could tear me away from this rock.

fiction short-story

Rules of taste enforce structures of power.

feminism aesthetics social-justice

[O]ne person's 'barbarian' is another person's 'just doing what everybody else is doing.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
society culture perspective standards double-standards prejudice morality perception civilization normalcy barbarians

Every culture has its southerners -- people who work as little as they can, preferring to dance, drink, sing brawl, kill their unfaithful spouses; who have livelier gestures, more lustrous eyes, more colorful garments, more fancifully decorated vehicles, a wonderful sense of rhythm, and charm, charm, charm; unambitious, no, lazy, ignorant, superstitious, uninhibited people, never on time, conspicuously poorer (how could it be otherwise, say the northerners); who for all their poverty and squalor lead enviable lives -- envied, that is, by work-driven, sensually inhibted, less corruptly governed northerners. We are superior to them, say the northerners, clearly superior. We do not shirk our duties or tell lies as a matter of course, we work hard, we are punctual, we keep reliable accounts. But they have more fun than we do ... They caution[ed] themselves as people do who know they are part of a superior culture: we mustn't let ourselves go, mustn't descend to the level of the ... jungle, street, bush, bog, hills, outback (take your pick). For if you start dancing on tables, fanning yourself, feeling sleepy when you pick up a book, developing a sense of rhythm, making love whenever you feel like it -- then you know. The south has got you.

em The Volcano Lover: A Romance
society culture clichés stereotypes prejudice perceptions superiority south southerners north north-and-south northerners regions

With genius, as with beauty -- all, well almost all, is forgiven.

em The Volcano Lover: A Romance
beauty forgiveness society generosity social-norms genius leniency exemptions

A large part of the popularity and persuasiveness of psychology comes from its being a sublimated spiritualism: a secular, ostensibly scientific way of affirming the primacy of spirit over matter.

em Illness as Metaphor & AIDS and Its Metaphors
psychology spirit spiritualism

We are told we must choose — the old or the new. In fact, we must choose both. What is a life if not a series of negotiations between the old and the

life time choices understanding future past attitude present

To me, literature is a calling, even a kind of salvation. It connects me with an enterprise that is over 2,000 years old. What do we have from the past? Art and thought. That’s what lasts. That’s what continues to feed people and give them an idea of something better.

culture literature

If literature has engaged me as a project, first as a reader, then as a writer, it is as an extension of my sympathies to other selves, other domains, other dreams, other territories.

literature

Depression is melancholy minus its charms.

em Illness as Metaphor
depression melancholy

Dissimulation, secretiveness, appear a necessity to the melancholic. He has complex, often veiled relations with others. These feelings of superiority, of inadequacy, of baffled feeling, of not being able to get what one wants, or even name it properly (or consistently) to oneself — these can be, it is felt they ought to be, masked by friendliness, or the most scrupulous manipulation.

em Under the Sign of Saturn: Essays
depression secrecy faking-it

Strictly speaking, there is no such thing as collective memory--part of the same family of spurious notions as collective guilt. But there is collective instruction....What is called collective memory is not a remembering but a stipulating: that this is important, and this is the story about how it happened, with the pictures that lock the story in our minds.

memory collective-memory

Compassion is an unstable emotion. It needs to be translated into action, or it withers. The question of what to do with the feelings that have been aroused, the knowledge that has been communicated. If one feels that there is nothing 'we' can do -- but who is that 'we'? -- and nothing 'they' can do either -- and who are 'they' -- then one starts to get bored, cynical, apathetic.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
apathy compassion action images

Can I love someone...and still think/fly? Love is flying, sown, floating. Thought is solitary flight, beating wings.

em As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964-1980
life love inspirational thoughts

It’s not love that the past needs in order to survive, it’s an absence of choices.

time past unguided-tour

For the modern consciousness, the artist (replacing the saint) is the exemplary sufferer. And among artists, the writer, the man of words, is the person to whom we look to be able best to express his suffering.

suffering writing artists essays the-artist

There is nothing wrong with standing back and thinking. To paraphrase several sages: 'Nobody can think and hit someone at the same time.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
suffering reflection violence

Desire wills its perpetuation ad infinitum.

em The Volcano Lover: A Romance
desire longing eternity infinity insatiability perpetuation

How much self-love comes in the guise of selfless devotion!

em The Volcano Lover: A Romance
devotion pretense self-love selflessness

A writer, I think, is someone who pays attention to the w

writing writers attention observation perspicacity

But maybe they were barbarians. Maybe this is what most barbarians look like. They look like everybody else.

evil racism torture genocide nazi barbarians

If one could amputate part of one's consciousness...

em As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964-1980
consciousness

Do stuff. Be clenched, curious. Not waiting for inspiration's shove or society's kiss on your forehead.

action curiosity boldness

Strictly speaking, nothing that’s said is true. (Though one can be the truth, one can’t ever say it.)

truth art language

Each of us carries a room within ourselves, waiting to be furnished and peopled, and if you listen closely, you may need to silence everything in your own room, you can hear the sounds of that other room inside your head.

em In America
language prose

All great art contains at its center contemplation, a dynamic contemplation.

em Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
art culture

All aesthetic judgment is really cultural evaluation.

em Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
art culture aesthetics

One can never ask anyone to change a feeling.

em As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964-1980
life love inspirational feelings

To paraphrase several sages: Nobody can think and hit someone at the same time.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
violence thinking sages hit

We like to stress the commonness of heroes. Essences seem undemocratic. We feel oppressed by the call to greatness. We regard an interest in glory or perfection as a sign of mental unhealthiness, and have decided that high achievers, who are called overachievers, owe their surplus ambition to a defect in mothering (either too little or too much). We want to admire but think we have a right not to be intimidated. We dislike feeling inferior to an ideal. So away with ideals, with essences. The only ideals allowed are healthy ones -- those everyone may aspire to, or comfortably imagine oneself possessing.

em The Volcano Lover: A Romance
jealousy essence success heroes perfection equality glory achievement democracy ambition greatness mediocrity intimidation ideals inferiority pettiness egalitarianism overachievers

It hurts to love. It's like giving yourself to be flayed and knowing that at any moment the other person may just walk off with your skin.

em Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
love heartbreak love-hurts

No such thing as a temptation. A temptation is a desire, a lust like any other - but one that we regret afterwards + wish undone (or that we know beforehand we will regret after). So it`s no excuse to say, ``I didn`t mean to do it. I was tempted + I couldn`t resist.`` All one can honestly say is, ``I did it. I`m sorry I did it.``- Reborn

em Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
truth character integrity temptation

My idea of a writer: someone interested in everything.

writing writer

I want to be able to be alone, to find it nourishing - not just a waiting.

em Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
solitude

The problems of this world are only truly solved in two ways: by extinction or by duplication

problems doubles

The fear of becoming old is born of the recognition that one is not living now the life that one wishes. It is equivalent to a sense of abusing the present.

em Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
ageing present

I like to feel dumb. That’s how I know there’s more in the world than me.

knowledge curiosity humbling

I have always been full of lust - as I am now - but I have always been placing conceptual obstacles in my own path.

em Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
lust

I’m now writing out of rage — and I feel a kind of Nietzschean elation. It’s tonic. I roar with laughter. I want to denounce everybody, tell everybody off. I go to my typewriter as I might go to my machine gun. But I’m safe. I don’t have to face the consequences of ‘real’ aggressivity. I’m sending out colis piégés ['booby-trapped packages'] to the world.

em As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964-1980
writing-process

All struggle, all resistance is -- must be -- concrete. And all struggle has a global resonance. If not here, then there. If not now, then soon. Elsewhere as well as here.

em At the Same Time: Essays and Speeches
trial struggle community

This philistinism of interpretation is more rife in literature than in any other art. For decades now, literary critics have understood it to be their task to translate the elements of the poem or play or novel or story into something else. Sometimes a writer will be so uneasy before the naked power of his art that he will install within the work itself - albeit with a little shyness, a touch of the good taste of irony - the clear and explicit interpretation of it. Thomas Mann is an example of such an overcooperative author. In the case of more stubborn authors, the critic is only too happy to perform the job.

criticism allegory against-interpretation

Today is such a time, when the project of interpretation is largely reactionary, stifling. Like the fumes of the automobile and of heavy industry which befoul the urban atmosphere, the effusion of interpretations of art today poisons our sensibilities. In a culture whose already classical dilemma is the hypertrophy of the intellect at the expense of energy and sensual capability, interpretation is the revenge of the intellect upon art.Even more. It is the revenge of the intellect upon the world. To interpret is to impoverish, to deplete the world - in order to set up a shadow world of 'meanings.' It is to turn the world into this world. ('This world'! As if there were any other.)The world, our world, is depleted, impoverished enough. Away with all duplicates of it, until we again experience more immediately what we have.

em Against Interpretation and Other Essays
criticism interpretation

The best criticism, and it is uncommon, is of this sort that dissolves considerations of content into those of form.

em Against Interpretation and Other Essays
criticism interpretation content form

Love words, agonize over sentences. And pay

writing writing-advice writing-craft writing-quotes

Time does not give one much leeway: it thrusts us forward from behind, blows us through the narrow tunnel of the present into the future. But space is broad, teeming with possibilities, positions, intersections, passages, detours, U-turns, dead-ends, one-way streets. Too many possibilities, indeed.

em Under the Sign of Saturn: Essays
time space walter-benjamin one-way-streets

Twentieth century women's fashions (with their cult of thinness) are the last stronghold of the metaphors associated with the romanticizing of TB in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

em Illness as Metaphor & AIDS and Its Metaphors
fashion thinness tuberculosis

Today everything exists to end in a photograph.

photography

To photograph people is to violate them, by seeing them as they never see themselves, by having knowledge of them that they can never have; it turns people into objects that can be symbolically possessed. Just as a camera is a sublimation of the gun, to photograph someone is a subliminal murder - a soft murder, appropriate to a sad, frightened time.

em On Photography
photography cameras

The painter constructs, the photographer discloses.

em On Photography
photography

Life is not about significant details, illuminated a flash, fixed forever.Photographs are.

em On Photography
life moments photography

As objects of contemplation, images of the atrocious can answer to several different needs. To steel oneself against weakness. To make oneself more numb. To acknowledge the existence of the incorrigible.

em Regarding the Pain of Others
photography atrocity war-photography

If there can be a better way for the real world to include the one of images, it will require an ecology not only of real things but of images as well.

em On Photography
photography instagram virtual

To take a picture is to have an interest in things as they are, in the status quo remaining unchanged, to be in complicity with whatever makes a subject interesting, worth photographing-including, when that is the interest, another person's pain or misfortune.

photography sontag

Recently, photography has become almost as widely practiced an amusement as sex and dancing – which means that, like every mass art form, photography is not practiced by most people as art. It is mainly a social rite, a defense against anxiety, and a tool of power.

photography

A photograph is both a pseudo-presence and a token of absence. Like a wood fire in a room, photographs—especially those of people, of distant landscapes and faraway cities, of the vanished past—are incitements to reverie. The sense of the unattainable that can be evoked by photographs feeds directly into the eroticfeelings of those for whom desirability is enhanced by distance.

em On Photography
quotes photography essays cultural-studies

The photographer is now charging real beasts, beleaguered and too rare to kill. Guns have metamorphosed into cameras in this earnest comedy, the ecology safari, because nature has ceased to be what it always had been - what people needed protection from. Now nature - tamed, endangered, mortal - needs to be protected from people. When we are afraid, we shoot. But when we are nostalgic, we take pictures.

em On Photography
philosophy photography photography-quotes essays

Photographs shock insofar as they show something novel.

em On Photography
art news novelty photography shock

Illness is the night side of life, a more onerous citizenship. Everyone who is born holds dual citizenship, in the kingdom of the well and in the kingdom of the sick. Although we all prefer to use the good passport, sooner or later each of us is obliged, at least for a spell, to identify ourselves as citizens of that other place.

em Illness as Metaphor
metaphor illness

Any important disease whose causality is murky, and for which treatment is ineffectual, tends to be awash in significance. First, the subjects of deepest dread (corruption, decay, pollution, anomie, weakness) are identified with the disease. The disease itself becomes a metaphor. Then, in the name of the disease (that is, using it as a metaphor), that horror is imposed on other things. The disease becomes adjectival. Something is said to be disease-like, meaning that it is disgusting or ugly.

em Illness as Metaphor & AIDS and Its Metaphors
metaphor disease

One feature of the usual script for plague: the disease invariably comes from somewhere else. The names for syphilis, when it began its epidemic sweep through Europe in the last decade of the fifteenth century are an exemplary illustration of the need to make a dreaded disease foreign. It was the "French pox" to the English, morbus Germanicus to the Parisians, the Naples sickness to the Florentines, the Chinese disease to the Japanese. But what may seem like a joke about the inevitability of chauvinism reveals a more important truth: that there is a link between imagining disease and imagining foreignness.

em Illness as Metaphor & AIDS and Its Metaphors
metaphor disease plague chauvinism

The age-old, seemingly inexorable process whereby diseases acquire meanings (by coming to stand for the deepest fears) and inflict stigma is always worth challenging, and it does seem to have more limited credibility in the modern world, among people willing to be modern - the process is under surveillance now. With this illness, one that elicits so much guilt and shame, the effort to detach it from these meanings, these metaphors, seems particularly liberating, even consoling. But the metaphors cannot be distanced just by abstaining from them. They have to be exposed, criticized, belabored, used up.

em Illness as Metaphor & AIDS and Its Metaphors
metaphor disease aids stigma

Attention is vitality. It connects you with others. It makes you eager. Stay eager.

attention eagerness

Reading usually precedes writing. And the impulse to write is almost always fired by reading. Reading, the love of reading, is what makes you dream of becoming a writer.

reading writing journalism susan-sontag

For those who live neither with religious consolations about death nor with a sense of death (or of anything else) as natural death is the obscene mystery the ultimate affront the thing that cannot be controlled. It can only be denied.

acceptance

Interpretation is the revenge of the intellect upon art.

art artist

Ambition if it feeds at all does so on the ambition of others.

greed

Intelligence is really a kind of taste: taste in ideas.

ignorance

What is most beautiful in virile men is something feminine what is most beautiful in feminine women is something masculine.

women men

Instead of just recording reality photographs have become the norm for the way things appear to us thereby changing the very idea of reality and of realism.

photography

The camera makes everyone a tourist in other people's reality and eventually in one's own.

photography

Life is not about significant details illuminated in a flash fixed forever. Photographs are.

photography

Although none of the rules for becoming alive is valid it is healthy to keep on formulating them.

positive

He who despises himself esteems himself as a self-despiser.

acceptance self

What is most beautiful in virile men is something feminine what is most beautiful in feminine women is something masculine.

knowledge self

It's a pleasure to share one's memories. Everything remembered is dear endearing touching precious. At least the past is safe-though we didn't know it at the time. We know it now. Because it's in the past because we have survived.

past

Existence is no more than the precarious attainment of relevance in an intensely mobile flux of past present and future.

present

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