Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Jeanette Winterson

Quote by Jeanette Winterson

“Fictions are not make-believe. We have come to understand this better through the medium of sci-fi, as so much of what begins as a futuristic fantasy becomes an ordinary part of the world we know. Fiction is much more than social-realist cut-outs of contemporary life. More than representation. Fiction declares and debates inner realities that gradually press forward into our outer circumstances. We catch up with our dreams.”

Quote by Jeanette Winterson

Work

One Aladdin Two Lamps

Browse quotes and source details for this work. more

Author

Jeanette Winterson
Jeanette Winterson

Jeanette Winterson is a renowned British author known for her distinctive literary style and profound social commentary. Her works span a wide range of themes, including novels, essays, and poetry. Winterson's novel 'Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit' is a story about growth, faith, and sexuality that has received widespread acclaim. more

You May Also Like

“The Dream Attack & Daydream Fictions is a unique work that blends scientific rigor with philosophical depth and literary aesthetics, leading the reader on an unconventional journey. From a reader's perspective, this book is not merely a collection of stories but a thought experiment exploring the intersection of ontological astrophysics, topology, and consciousness. The work questions the thin, permeable boundary between dreams and reality through eight interconnected stories. The author’s background as a physicist lends scientific weight to concepts like "topological relationships" and "connectionist integrity," while masterfully exploring the transitions between Mythos and Logos. In stories such as "Trojan 137" and "The Scarlet Letter," time and consciousness are constructed as intricate labyrinths. Each narrative is an ideal plane placed in the realm of reality.”

“This gathering, this dwelling place where they slept now, heaped together, was only one, a relatively small one, of many. It was a small subcolony of dream-givers. Every human population has countless such colonies—invisible always—of these well-organized, attentive, and hard-working creatures who move silently through the nights at their task. Their task is both simple and at the same time immensely difficult. Through touching, they gather material: memories, colors, words once spoken, hints of scents and the tiniest fragments of forgotten sound. They collect pieces of the past, of long ago and of yesterday. They combine these things carefully, creating dreams. Then they insert the dreams as the humans (and sometimes animals, for occasionally they give dreams to pets, as well) sleep. The act of dream insertion is called bestowal.”