“I think I'm probably too close to the seventies to be able to analyse them (it?) effectively.” Quote by Quentin S. Crisp
“I mean, in 1979 I was seven. I do remember punk, though, as a playground phenomenon, and remember that it was exciting to us. It really was, to a five- or six-year-old, quite a thrilling enticement to revolt. The anarchy sign scratched in desk tops, and so on.” YearsMeanRememberFiveSixExcitingSevenPhenomenonAnarchyPunkDesksThrillingRevoltPlaygroundsSix Year OldsEnticement Author:Quentin S. Crisp
“To me the seventies represent normality, and, of course, it is a normality that is now anachronistic.” CoursesSeventiesNormality Author:Quentin S. Crisp
“This is the strange thing about existing in time. As [Philip] Larkin puts it, "truly, though our element is time, we are not used to the strange perspectives open at each moment of our lives" - something like that.” MomentsUsedOur LivesStrangePerspectiveElementsStrange ThingsPhilip Author:Quentin S. Crisp
“Anyway, yes, telephones but not mobile phones, fish and chips still wrapped in actual newspaper and still with some kind of flavour, people visiting each other without having to consult their appointment diaries, not being able to record anything from the television; if you missed it you missed it - these were all the kinds of thing that made up the normality of the seventies.” PeopleIfsKindMadeStillsAbleRecordsTelevisionPhonesFishesNewspapersTelephonesSeventiesChipsDiariesMobileVisitingAppointmentsNormalityMobile PhonesFlavourFish And Chips Author:Quentin S. Crisp
“When I think back on it, I have a sense of relaxation, as if in the seventies no one had to try to be anyone other than who they were. I'm sure that's not really true, but that's how I remember it, and I suppose it might be relatively true.” IfsThinkingTryingMightRememberSeventiesRelaxationReally True Author:Quentin S. Crisp
“On the other hand, the seventies were drab. That is, I am utterly fascinated by the fifties and sixties.” HandsFascinatedSixtySeventies Author:Quentin S. Crisp
“We're all more or less interested in the 'swinging sixties', of course, but that's not what I mean. I'm interested in the particular naive glamour that clings to the post-war and pre-Hendrix era.” MeanWarCoursesParticularErasPostsSixtyNaiveGlamourHendrixPost War Author:Quentin S. Crisp
“I don't know if Britain ever really achieved that much glamour. We had post-war austerity rather than post-war prosperity, and our cultural products of the time include some pretty dour kitchen-sink dramas of the A Kind of Loving variety. (This kind of film seems disillusioned with the sixties before they've even really begun.)” IfsKnowsKindWarSeemsFilmProductsDramaProsperityVarietyPostsKitchenBritainSixtyGlamourDisillusionedAusterityPost WarKitchen Sinks Author:Quentin S. Crisp
“The cultural products of America from this period [ fifties and sixties] are like a vision of paradise or something. I find it utterly intoxicating.” AmericaVisionProductsPeriodsParadiseSixty Author:Quentin S. Crisp
“Speaking of [Philip] Larkin, in his poem about the First World War he wrote something like, "Never such innocence, before or since, that turned itself to past without a word".” WorldFirstsWarPastInnocenceWar Of The WorldsPhilipFirst World War Author:Quentin S. Crisp