Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Sherwood Anderson

Quote by Sherwood Anderson

“Dreams then were to be expressed in building railroads and factories, in boring gas wells, stringing telegraph poles. There was room for no other dream and since father could not do any of these things he was an outlaw in his community. The community tolerated him. His own sons tolerated him.”

Quote by Sherwood Anderson

Work

A Story Teller's Story

Browse quotes and source details for this work. more

Author

Sherwood Anderson
Sherwood Anderson

American novelist known for his profound insights into the lives of the American middle class. Anderson's works often focus on the inner world and social status of ordinary people, and his style is concise and direct, which has had a profound impact on American literature. more

You May Also Like

“Religiosity complete culture and civilization .civilization not just go around a table together. No civilized person sit behind the desk just. Society and the individual should be the size of such decorations and scenery. There is a sense and knowledge ,wisdom and wise that is completed that requires valuable and pricing that is religion and faith and chivalry. This is why Islamic civilization and culture extensions of religion, chivalry, freedom that complete of every culture and civilization”

Author:religion

“En tanto que nosotros hemos preferido siempre adaptar nuestra economía y tecnología a los seres humanos, no nuestros seres humanos a la economía y tecnología de otros. Importamos lo que no podemos fabricar; pero fabricamos e importamos sólo lo que podemos permitirnos. Y lo que podemos permitirnos está limitado, no sólo por las libras, marcos y dólares que poseemos, sino también, y principalmente... principalmente por nuestro deseo de ser felices, nuestra ambición de ser humanos.”

“[...] el escolasticismo económico tardío de la España de los siglos XVI y XVII, con los nuevos cálculos mercantiles aplicados al valor, al precio, a los salarios, a la justicia, a los beneficios y a la banca una teoría económica incluso más refinada que la que se había desarrollado en algunas sociedades del norte de Europa —sobre todo en países protestantes— y, desde un punto de vista económico, más vanguardista.”

“Escinde vida humana y naturaleza, identifi ca los valores asociados a la masculinidad con lo propiamente humano, impone un sueño loco de autosufi - ciencia e identifi ca bien-estar con consumo mercantil en permanente crecimiento y progreso. Es una noción de vida vivible no universalizable y que no respeta la diferencia.”