Character: The History of a Cultural Ob... A source page for quotes linked to Marjorie Garber. 0 quotes
“There are men of character in the U.S. Congress, both House and Senate. There are women of character, too. But the evidence for "character" needs to be something other than the iteration of the word itself.” CharacterPoliticsHonorIntegrityCongress Book:Character: The History of a Cultural Obsession Source: Character: The History of a Cultural Obsession
“These debates framed and energized educational and philosophical schemes throughout that century and well into the following one. What was at stake was in part the very divergent, often intrinsically antithetical set of meanings that constellated around, and crystallized in, the concept of the word "character." Was it intrinsic or acquired? Could it be taught? Was a "strong character" one that acted or one that withheld? And, above all, could it change? For, if human character could be changed- or could change itself- for the better, was it not the obligation of society and the individual, the schools and the home, to do what they could to "improve" it?” CharacterPersonalityCharacter BuildingStrong CharacterEducuation Book:Character: The History of a Cultural Obsession Source: Character: The History of a Cultural Obsession
“Nostalgic memory is a sudden encounter with the thingness of the thing that has been forgotten, not the continuous desire for possessions, whether past, present, or future.” NostalgiaThingness Author:Marjorie Garber
“Avoiding the Scylla of the nunnery, Hermia sails dangerously close to the Charybdis of Titania's lust for the ass-headed Bottom, but emerges safely, and somewhat more self-knowledgeably, into the orderly harbor of marriage.” MarriageComing Of AgeShakespeareMidsummer Nights DreamScylla And CharybdisHermia Book:Coming of Age in Shakespeare Source: Coming of Age in Shakespeare
“Dog love is not the special realm of childhood or of boyhood, no matter what the movies keep telling us. It is highly significant, I think, that at both ends of human life span the bond between human and dog speaks with an insistent clarity - if we have the ears to hear.” IfsThinkingHumansEndsMatterSpeakLove IsChildhoodSpecialDogEarsNo Matter WhatSignificantClarityHuman LifeRealmsBoyhoodDog LoveLife SpanHumans And Dogs Book:DOG LOVE Source: DOG LOVE
“The dogs in our lives, the dogs we come to love and who (we fervently believe) love us in return, offer more than fidelity, consolation, and companionship. They offer comedy, irony, wit, and a wealth of anecdotes, the "shaggy dog stories" and "stupid pet tricks" that are commonplace pleasures of life.” BelieveStoriesWealthPleasureComedyOur LivesDogStupidReturnOffersWitTricksIronyPetCompanionshipConsolationCommonplaceFidelityAnecdotesBelieve In LovePleasures Of Life Author:Marjorie Garber
“They offer, if we are wise enough or simple enough to take it, a model for what it means to give your heart with little thought of return. Both powerfully imaginary and comfortingly real, dogs act as mirrors for our own beliefs about what would constitute a truly humane society. Perhaps it is not too late for them to teach us some new tricks.” IfsGivingHeartMeanLittlesRealEnoughBeliefSimpleTeachWiseDogReturnOffersLateModelsMirrorsTricksToo LateImaginaryHumaneHumane Society Author:Marjorie Garber
“If you have a dog, you will most likely outlive it; to get a dog is to open yourself to profound joy and, prospectively, to equally profound sadness.” IfsJoyFriendshipLossSadnessDogProfoundPetPet LossDog LossProfound Sadness Author:Marjorie Garber
“We do literature a real disservice if we reduce it to knowledge or to use, to a problem to be solved. If literature solves problems, it does so by its own inexhaustibility, and by its ultimate refusal to be applied or used, even for moral good. This refusal, indeed, is literature's most moral act. At a time when meanings are manifold, disparate, and always changing, the rich possibility of interpretation--the happy resistance of the text to ever be fully known and mastered--is one of the most exhilarating products of human culture.” IfsHumansDoeRealUseProblemUsedCultureLiteratureKnownMoralRichPossibilityProductsUltimateSolveResistanceInterpretationRefusalExhilaratingDisserviceManifold Book:The Use and Abuse of Literature Source: The Use and Abuse of Literature
“If any era should be aware of the temptations to rewrite history, it is our own.” IfsShouldTemptationEras Book:Shakespeare and Modern Culture Source: Shakespeare and Modern Culture
“Jargon marks the place where thinking has been. It becomes a kind of macro, to use a computer term: a way of storing a complicated sequence of thinking operations under a unique name.” ThinkingWayKindHas BeensUseNamesTermComputerUniqueMarkComplicatedOperationsSequenceJargonMacro Book:Academic Instincts Source: Academic Instincts
“Well named, Quotology contains everything you always wanted to know about quotations, quoters, quotees, quotation books, 'quoox' (quotations out of context), and their fascinating history.” KnowsWellsBookWantedFascinatingQuotationsOf Context Author:Marjorie Garber
“A study conducted by the State University of New York at Buffalo Medical School suggested that in times of stress a dog is likely to be more help in calming you down than a spouse or partner. Most dog owners can guess the reason why: dogs never judge us and never compete with us.” StatesReasonHelpingSchoolFriendshipStudyDogNew YorkJudgingStressUniversityMedicalPartnersReason WhyOwnersSpouseCalmingBuffaloMedical SchoolDog Owner Book:DOG LOVE Source: DOG LOVE
“The dog becomes the repository of those model human properties that we have cynically ceased to find among humans. Where today can we find the full panoply of William Bennett's Book of Virtues-from Courage and Responsibility to Loyalty and Family Values-but in Lassie and Beethoven and Millie and Checkers and Spot?” HumansBookTodayValuesResponsibilityVirtueDogModelsPropertyLoyaltySpotsFamily ValuesCheckersLassie Book:DOG LOVE Source: DOG LOVE