“But I learned from these new books that Southerners think we are really rather sad. They have an idea of a people dwelling on a mountain, inbred, lonely, mysterious; that we ritually climb and descend, and make sacrifices, and burn eternal flames, and send bridal parties from village to village in the spring so men like Daila can impregnate women like me, all in order to placate something implacable. They see our culture as rich, in the same way perhaps that a seam of ancient ore is rich — because of compression and repression. They imagine that we drink a lot, even more than we do (and it is a thing I learned from the bar, that they drink as much as we, that every culture that’s discovered alcohol drinks too much) and that we are poorer than we are because only a few of us sell anything to them. A melancholy drunken land, a land of storytellers, a land of sly jokes, an Asam-hating land, and nothing like the land I remembered. It was as if someone had constructed a scaffolding around us, and then removed us and written only about the scaffolding. The more I read, the more the materials of the scaffolding — splintered wood, narrow pipes of metal — slid into the hollows of my bones. I knew that the next time I went to the mountain, I would have a stranger’s mind in mine. Though I walked in streets I had known since girlhood, I would never again be able to step upon them without an erudite word in my head and a bracing of metal in my marrow.”
Quote by Rachel Fellman
Work
The Breath of the Sun
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
“There is no us, Abu Fahd. There is no them. We're all the same.”
Source: The Bad Muslim Discount
Source: The Silent Symphony
Source: You Are Us: How to Build Bridges in a Polarized World
Source: Suck Less, Do Better: The End of Excuses & the Rise of the Unstoppable You
Source: Go Back to Where You Came From: And Other Helpful Recommendations on How to Become American
Source: Egypt under El-Sisi: A Nation on the Edge
Source: Egypt under El-Sisi: A Nation on the Edge
Source: Witches, Bitches, It-Girls: Wie patriarchale Mythen uns bis heute prägen
Source: Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity