Maurice Blanchot was a French writer known for his profound philosophical thoughts and unique literary style. His works spanned across philosophy, literary criticism, and fiction, profoundly influencing French culture in the 20th century.
Related Quotes
Source: The Writing of the Disaster
Source: The Last Man
Source: Death Sentence
Source: Awaiting Oblivion
Source: The Space of Literature
Source: Friendship
Source: The Infinite Conversation
Source: The Space of Literature
Source: The gaze of Orpheus, and other literary essays
“Weak thoughts, weak desires: he felt their force.”
Source: The Step Not Beyond
“If nothing were substituted for everything, it would still be too much and too little.”
Source: The Writing of the Disaster
Source: The Space of Literature
“But my silence is real. If I hid it from you, you would find it again a little farther on.”
Source: Folie Du Jour
“A story? No. No stories, never again.”
Source: Folie Du Jour
Source: Folie Du Jour
“To see was terrifying, and to stop seeing tore me apart from my forehead to my throat.”
Source: Folie Du Jour
Source: The Writing of the Disaster
Source: The gaze of Orpheus, and other literary essays
“The disaster ruins everything, all the while leaving everything intact.”
Source: The Writing of the Disaster
“Express only that which cannot be expressed. Leave it unexpressed)”
Source: Awaiting Oblivion
Source: The gaze of Orpheus, and other literary essays
