eb51692
|
We have to create culture, don't watch TV, don't read magazines, don't even listen to NPR. Create your own roadshow. The nexus of space and time where you are now is the most immediate sector of your universe, and if you're worrying about Michael Jackson or Bill Clinton or somebody else, then you are disempowered, you're giving it all away to icons, icons which are maintained by an electronic media so that you want to dress like X or have lips like Y. This is shit-brained, this kind of thinking. That is all cultural diversion, and what is real is you and your friends and your associations, your highs, your orgasms, your hopes, your plans, your fears. And we are told 'no', we're unimportant, we're peripheral. 'Get a degree, get a job, get a this, get a that.' And then you're a player, you don't want to even play in that game. You want to reclaim your mind and get it out of the hands of the cultural engineers who want to turn you into a half-baked moron consuming all this trash that's being manufactured out of the bones of a dying world.
|
|
life
wisdom
inspirational
tv
culture
consumerism
|
Terence McKenna |
8f4c56e
|
Women who love themselves are threatening; but men who love real women, more so.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
c920a91
|
When I was a child, when I was an adolescent, books saved me from despair: that convinced me that culture was the highest of values[...].
|
|
literature
culture
|
Simone de Beauvoir |
b73e6ec
|
Men build too many walls and not enough bridges.
|
|
hatred
misattributed-to-isaac-newton
understanding
sympathy
racism
men
hate
empathy
compassion
love
inspirational
culture-wars
bridges
misattributed
intolerance
cultures
walls
tolerance
bigotry
culture
separation
|
Joseph Fort Newton |
2c6057e
|
"Sadly, the signals that allow men and women to find the partners who most please them are scrambled by the sexual insecurity initiated by beauty thinking. A woman who is self-conscious can't relax to let her sensuality come into play. If she is hungry she will be tense. If she is "done up" she will be on the alert for her reflection in his eyes. If she is ashamed of her body, its movement will be stilled. If she does not feel entitled to claim attention, she will not demand that airspace to shine in. If his field of vision has been boxed in by "beauty"--a box continually shrinking--he simply will not see her, his real love, standing right before him."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
|
Naomi Wolf |
32ce2ff
|
Beauty provokes harassment, the law says, but it looks through men's eyes when deciding what provokes it.
|
|
rape
equality
feminism
beauty
harassment
sexual-harassment
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
law
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
adb17ef
|
"Men are visually aroused by women's bodies and less sensitive to their arousal by women's personalities because they are trained early into that response, while women are less visually aroused and more emotionally aroused because that is their training. This asymmetry in sexual education maintains men's power in the myth: They look at women's bodies, evaluate, move on; their own bodies are not looked at, evaluated, and taken or passed over. But there is no "rock called gender" responsible for that; it can change so that real mutuality--an equal gaze, equal vulnerability, equal desire--brings heterosexual men and women together."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
c97fcae
|
"What becomes of a man who acquires a beautiful woman, with her "beauty" his sole target? He sabotages himself. He has gained no friend, no ally, no mutual trust: She knows quite well why she has been chosen. He has succeeded in buying something: the esteem of other men who find such an acquisition impressive."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
|
Naomi Wolf |
5b24af7
|
A consequence of female self-love is that the woman grows convinced of social worth. Her love for her body will be unqualified, which is the basis of female identification. If a woman loves her own body, she doesn't grudge what other women do with theirs; if she loves femaleness, she champions its rights. It's true what they say about women: Women insatiable. We greedy. Our appetites do need to be controlled if things are to stay in place. If the world were ours too, if we believed we could get away with it, we ask for more love, more sex, more money, more commitment to children, more food, more care. These sexual, emotional, and physical demands begin to extend to social demands: payment for care of the elderly, parental leave, childcare, etc. The force of female desire would be so great that society would truly have to reckon with what women want, in bed and in the world.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
self-love
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
ef73662
|
The soul takes nothing with her to the next world but her education and her culture. At the beginning of the journey to the next world, one's education and culture can either provide the greatest assistance, or else act as the greatest burden, to the person who has just died.
|
|
education
culture
|
Plato |
ca62da9
|
I will defend the absolute value of Mozart over Miley Cyrus, of course I will, but we should be wary of false dichotomies. You do not have to choose between one or the other. You can have both. The human cultural jungle should be as varied and plural as the Amazonian rainforest. We are all richer for biodiversity. We may decide that a puma is worth more to us than a caterpillar, but surely we can agree that the habitat is all the better for being able to sustain each.
|
|
celebrity-worship
false-dichotomy
culture
|
Stephen Fry |
be6fc40
|
We cannot have a world where everyone is a victim. "I'm this way because my father made me this way. I'm this way because my husband made me this way." Yes, we are indeed formed by traumas that happen to us. But then you must take charge, you must take over, you are responsible.
|
|
democrat
sex
criticism
responsibility
america
inspirational
republican
victim
liberal
libertarian
art
culture
trauma
|
Camille Paglia |
b07e739
|
The downfall of the attempts of governments and leaders to unite mankind is found in this- in the wrong message that we should see everyone as the same. This is the root of the failure of harmony. Because the truth is, we should not all see everyone as the same! We are not the same! We are made of different colours and we have different cultures. We are all different! But the key to this door is to look at these differences, respect these differences, learn from and about these differences, and grow in and with these differences. We are all different. We are not the same. But that's beautiful. And that's okay.In the quest for unity and peace, we cannot blind ourselves and expect to be all the same. Because in this, we all have an underlying belief that everyone should be the same as us at some point. We are not on a journey to become the same or to be the same. But we are on a journey to see that in all of our differences, that is what makes us beautiful as a human race, and if we are ever to grow, we ought to learn and always learn some more.
|
|
equality
unity
color
humanism
human
humanity
inspiration
inspirational-quotes
inspirational
differences
difference
society
culture
race
government
harmony
peace
|
C. JoyBell C. |
58ff3ca
|
Without culture, and the relative freedom it implies, society, even when perfect, is but a jungle. This is why any authentic creation is a gift to the future.
|
|
culture
creation
|
Albert Camus |
c2cdfc0
|
The beauty myth is always actually prescribing behaviour and not appearance.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
ef426d9
|
There's no such thing as civilization. The word just means the art of living in cities.
|
|
war
culture
|
Roger Zelazny |
b380f52
|
"Whatever is deeply, essentially female--the life in a woman's expression, the feel of her flesh, the shape of her breasts, the transformations after childbirth of her skin--is being reclassified as ugly, and ugliness as disease. These qualities are about an intensification of female power, which explains why they are being recast as a diminution of power. At least a third of a woman's life is marked with aging; about a third of her body is made of fat. Both symbols are being transformed into operable condition-- women will only feel healthy if we are two thirds of the women we could be. How can an "ideal" be about women if it is defined as how much of a female sexual characteristic exist on the woman's body, and how much of a female life show on her face?"
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
319c5c6
|
"Women could probably be trained quite easily to see men first as sexual things. If girls never experienced sexual violence; if a girl's only window on male sexuality were a stream of easily available, well-lit, cheap images of boys slightly older than herself, in their late teens, smiling encouragingly and revealing cuddly erect penises the color of roses or mocha, she might well look at, masturbate to, and, as an adult, "need" beauty pornography based on the bodies of men. And if those initiating penises were represented to the girl as pneumatically erectible, swerving neither left nor right, tasting of cinnamon or forest berries, innocent of random hairs, and ever ready; if they were presented alongside their measurements, length, and circumference to the quarter inch; if they seemed to be available to her with no troublesome personality attached; if her sweet pleasure seemed to be the only reason for them to exist--then a real young man would probably approach the young woman's bed with, to say the least, a failing heart."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
b9cb5e7
|
"The Victorian woman became her ovaries, as today's woman has become her "beauty."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
9ce3504
|
"Our culture has filled our heads but emptied our hearts, stuffed our wallets but starved our wonder. It has fed our thirst for facts but not for meaning or mystery. It produces "nice" people, not heroes."
|
|
heroes
christianity
spirituality
philosophy
culture-critique
jesus-shock
culture
theology
|
Peter Kreeft |
155cc2e
|
"A man is unlikely to be brought within earshot of women as they judge men's appearance, height, muscle tone, sexual technique, penis size, personal grooming, or taste in clothes--all of which we do. The fact is that women are able to view men just as men view women, as objects for sexual and aesthetic evaluation; we too are effortlessly able to choose the male "ideal" from a lineup and if we could have male beauty as well as everything else, most of us would not say no. But so what? Given all that, women make the choice, by and large, to take men as human beings first."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
6f37aec
|
"Their [girls] sexual energy, their evaluation of adolescent boys and other girls goes thwarted, deflected back upon the girls, unspoken, and their searching hungry gazed returned to their own bodies. The questions, Whom do I desire? Why? What will I do about it? are turned around: Would I desire myself? Why?...Why ? What can I do about it? The books and films they see survey from the young boy's point of view his first touch of a girl's thighs, his first glimpse of her breasts. The girls sit listening, absorbing, their familiar breasts estranged as if they were not part of their bodies, their thighs crossed self-consciously, learning how to leave their bodies and watch them from the outside. Since their bodies are seen from the point of view of strangeness and desire, it is no wonder that what should be familiar, felt to be whole, become estranged and divided into parts. What little girls learn is not the desire for the other, but the desire to be desired. Girls learn to watch their sex along with the boys; that takes up the space that should be devoted to finding out about what they are wanting, and reading and writing about it, seeking it and getting it. Sex is held hostage by beauty and its ransom terms are engraved in girls' minds early and deeply with instruments more beautiful that those which advertisers or pornographers know how to use: literature, poetry, painting, and film. This outside-in perspective on their own sexuality leads to the confusion that is at the heart of the myth. Women come to confuse sexual looking with being looked at sexually ("Clairol...it's the look you want"); many confuse sexually feeling with being sexually felt ("Gillete razors...the way a woman wants to feel"); many confuse desiring with being desirable. "My first sexual memory," a woman tells me, "was when I first shaved my legs, and when I ran my hand down the smooth skin I felt how it would feel to someone else's hand." Women say that when they lost weight they "feel sexier" but the nerve endings in the clitoris and nipples don't multiply with weight loss. Women tell me they're jealous of the men who get so much pleasure out of the female body that they imagine being inside the male body that is inside their own so that they can vicariously experience desire. Could it be then that women's famous slowness of arousal to men's, complex fantasy life, the lack of pleasure many experience in intercourse, is related to this cultural negation of sexual imagery that affirms the female point of view, the culture prohibition against seeing men's bodies as instruments of pleasure? Could it be related to the taboo against representing intercourse as an opportunity for a straight woman actively to pursue, grasp, savor, and consume the male body for her satisfaction, as much as she is pursued, grasped, savored, and consumed for his?"
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
|
Naomi Wolf |
4ac3445
|
We do not have to spend money and go hungry and struggle and study to become sensual; we always were. We need not believe we must somehow earn good erotic care; we always deserved it. Femaleness and its sexuality are beautiful. Women have long secretly suspected as much. In that sexuality, women are physically beautiful already; superb; breathtaking. Many, many men see this way too. A man who wants to define himself as a real lover of women admires what shows of her past on a woman's face, before she ever saw him, and the adventures and stresses that her body has undergone, the scars of trauma, the changes of childbirth, her distinguishing characteristics, the light is her expression. The number of men who already see in this way is far greater than the arbiters of mass culture would lead us to believe, since the story they need to tell ends with the opposite moral.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
dc6c4b5
|
Cosmetic surgery processes the bodies of woman-made women, who make up the vast majority of its patient pool, into man-made women.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
264d794
|
Every culture has its southerners -- people who work as little as they can, preferring to dance, drink, sing brawl, kill their unfaithful spouses; who have livelier gestures, more lustrous eyes, more colorful garments, more fancifully decorated vehicles, a wonderful sense of rhythm, and charm, charm, charm; unambitious, no, lazy, ignorant, superstitious, uninhibited people, never on time, conspicuously poorer (how could it be otherwise, say the northerners); who for all their poverty and squalor lead enviable lives -- envied, that is, by work-driven, sensually inhibted, less corruptly governed northerners. We are superior to them, say the northerners, clearly superior. We do not shirk our duties or tell lies as a matter of course, we work hard, we are punctual, we keep reliable accounts. But they have more fun than we do ... They caution[ed] themselves as people do who know they are part of a superior culture: we mustn't let ourselves go, mustn't descend to the level of the ... jungle, street, bush, bog, hills, outback (take your pick). For if you start dancing on tables, fanning yourself, feeling sleepy when you pick up a book, developing a sense of rhythm, making love whenever you feel like it -- then you know. The south has got you.
|
|
stereotypes
prejudice
northerners
regions
superiority
north
south
north-and-south
southerners
society
culture
perceptions
|
Susan Sontag |
0bdf05d
|
"They never said "I don't know." They said, instead, "I'm not sure," which did not give any information but still suggested the possibility of knowledge."
|
|
culture
|
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie |
acc3482
|
Why should her lover, just because he is male, be in a position to judge her against other women? Why must she need to know her position and hate needing to, and hate knowing? Why should his reply have such exaggerated power? And it does. He does not know that what he says will affect the way she feels when they next make love. She is angry for a number of good reasons that may have nothing to do with this particular man's intentions. The exchange reminds her that, in spite of a whole fabric of carefully woven equalities, they are not equal in this way that is so crucial that its snagged thread unravels the rest.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
|
Naomi Wolf |
2c8b53a
|
What are other women really thinking, feeling, experiencing, when they slip away from the gaze and culture of men?
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
aef238b
|
"Our society reward beauty on the outside over health on the inside. Women must not be blamed for choosing short-term beauty "fixes" that harm our long-term health, since our life spans are inverted under the beauty myth, and there is no great social or economic incentive for women to live a long time. A thin young woman with precancerous lungs [who smokes to stay thin] is more highly rewarded socially that a hearty old crone. Spokespeople sell women the Iron Maiden [an intrinsically unattainable standard of beauty used to punish women for their failure to achieve and conform to it]and name her "Health": if public discourse were really concerned with women's health, it would turn angrily upon this aspect of the beauty myth."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
63bdec2
|
For the first time in history, children are growing up whose earliest sexual imprinting derives not from a living human being, or fantasies of their own; since the 1960s pornographic upsurge, the sexuality of children has begun to be shaped in response to cues that are no longer human. Nothing comparable has ever happened in the history of our species; it dislodges Freud. Today's children and young men and women have sexual identities that spiral around paper and celluloid phantoms: from to music videos to the blank females torsos in women's magazines, features obscured and eyes extinguished, they are being imprinted with a sexuality that is mass-produced, deliberately dehumanizing and inhuman.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
88856fd
|
Men who read it [beauty pornography] don't do so because they want who look like that. The attraction of what they are holding is that it is a woman, but a two-dimensional woman-shaped blank. The appeal of the material is not the fantasy that the model will come to life; it is precisely that she will not, ever. Her coming to life would ruin the vision. It is not about life. Ideal beauty is ideal because it does not exist; The action lies in the gap between desire and gratification. Women are not perfect beauties without distance. That space, in a consumer culture, is a lucrative one. The beauty myth moves for men as a mirage, its power lies in its ever-receding nature. When the gap is closed, the lover embraces only his own disillusion.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
consumer
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
|
Naomi Wolf |
450bfe8
|
What editors are obliged to appear to say that want from women is actually what their want from women.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
conformity
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
845cbfd
|
"The beauty myth sets it up this way: A high rating as an art object is the most valuable tribute a woman can exact from her lover. If he appreciates her face and body because it is hers, that is next to worthless. It is very neat: The myth contrives to make women offend men by scrutinizing honest appreciation when they give it; it can make men offend women merely by giving them honest appreciation. It can manage to contaminate the sentence "You're beautiful," which is next to "I love you" in expressing a bond of regard between a woman and a man. A man cannot tell a woman that he loves to look at her without risking making her unhappy. If he never tells her, she is to be unhappy. And the "luckiest" woman of all, told she is loved because she's "beautiful," is often tormented because she lacks the security of being desired because she looks like who she lovably is."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
a35d265
|
What has our culture lost in 1980 that the avant-garde had in 1890? Ebullience, idealism, confidence, the belief that there was plenty of territory to explore, and above all the sense that art, in the most disinterested and noble way, could find the necessary metaphors by which a radically changing culture could be explained to its inhabitants.
|
|
metaphor
irony
idealism
confidence
avant-garde
ebullience
meta-modernism
shia-lebouf
david-foster-wallace
post-ironic
art
culture
postmodernism
|
Robert Hughes |
5e2a03c
|
"If you've spent any time trolling the blogosphere, you've probably noticed a peculiar literary trend: the pervasive habit of writers inexplicably placing exclamation points at the end of otherwise unremarkable sentences. Sort of like this! This is done to suggest an ironic detachment from the writing of an expository sentence! It's supposed to signify that the writer is self-aware! And this is idiotic. It's the saddest kind of failure. F. Scott Fitzgerald believed inserting exclamation points was the literary equivalent of an author laughing at his own jokes, but that's not the case in the modern age; now, the exclamation point signifies creative confusion. All it illustrates is that even the writer can't tell if what they're creating is supposed to be meaningful, frivolous, or cruel. It's an attempt to insert humor where none exists, on the off chance that a potential reader will only be pleased if they suspect they're being entertained. Of course, the reader isn't really sure, either. They just want to know when they're supposed to pretend to be amused. All those extraneous exclamation points are like little splatters of canned laughter: They represent the "form of funny," which is more easily understood (and more easily constructed) than authentic funniness. "
|
|
humor
blogging
culture
|
Chuck Klosterman |
1c0b820
|
If diversity is a source of wonder, its opposite - the ubiquitous condensation to some blandly amorphous and singulary generic modern culture that takes for granted an impoverished environment - is a source of dismay. There is, indeed, a fire burning over the earth, taking with it plants and animals, cultures, languages, ancient skills and visionary wisdom. Quelling this flame, and re-inventing the poetry of diversity is perhaps the most importent challenge of our times.
|
|
diversity
culture
survival
|
Wade Davis |
c61f258
|
Health makes good propaganda.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
society
culture
double-standards
health
propaganda
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
5129dbc
|
"Cosmetic surgery is not "cosmetic," and human flesh is not "plastic." Even the names trivialize what it is. It's not like ironing wrinkles in fabric, or tuning up a car, or altering outmoded clothes, the current metaphors. Trivialization and infantilization pervade the surgeons' language when they speak to women: "a nip," a "tummy tuck."...Surgery changes one forever, the mind as well as the body. If we don't start to speak of it as serious, the millennium of the man-made woman will be upon us, and we will have had no choice."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
|
Naomi Wolf |
f3a79fd
|
Cultural survival is not about preservation, sequestering indigenous peoples in enclaves like some sort of zoological specimens. Change itself does note destroy a culture. All societies are constantly evolving. Indeed a culture survives when it has enough confidence in its past and enough say in its future to maintain its spirit and essence through all the changes it will inevitably undergo.
|
|
future
past
misattributed
david-marbury-lewis
evolve
culture
survival
|
Wade Davis |
99834bb
|
Books are, let's face it, better than everything else. If we played Cultural Fantasy Boxing League, and made books go fifteen rounds in the ring against the best that any other art form had to offer, then books would win pretty much every time.
|
|
reading
humor
love-of-reading
culture
sports
|
Nick Hornby |
e53c064
|
Look, part of the whole technique of disempowering people is to make sure that the real agents of change fall out of history, and are never recognized in the culture for what they are. So it's necessary to distort history and make it look as if Great Men did everything - that's part of how you teach people they can't do anything, they're helpless, they just have to wait for some Great Man to come along and do it for them.
|
|
history
culture
power
|
Noam Chomsky |
9775c3e
|
When [beauty pornography is] aimed at men, its effect is to keep them from finding peace in sexual love. The fleeting chimera of the airbrushed centerfold, always receding before him, keeps the man destabilized in pursuit, unable to focus on the beauty of the woman--known, marked, lined, familiar---who hands him the paper every morning.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
dc8af8d
|
One book calls to another unexpectedly, creating alliances across different cultures and centuries.
|
|
books
culture
|
Alberto Manguel |
2fffa35
|
The maturing of a woman who has continued to grow is a beautiful thing to behold. Or, if your ad revenue or your seven-figure salary or your privileged sexual status depend on it, it is an operable condition.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
20f423e
|
Today a woman must ignore her reflection in the eyes of her lover, since he might admire her, and seek it in the gaze of the God of Beauty, in whose perception she is never complete.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
e98426b
|
"The surgeons are playing on the myth's double standard for the function of the body. A man's thigh is for walking, but a woman's is for walking and looking "beautiful." If women can walk but believe our limbs look wrong, we feel that our bodies cannot do what they are meant to do; we feel as genuinely deformed and disabled as the unwilling Victorian hypochondriac felt ill."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
3995595
|
I used to think it was possible for an artist to alter the inner life of the culture. Now bomb-makers and gunmen have taken that territory.
|
|
war
culture
guns
|
Don DeLillo |
d3d3be8
|
But the Church cannot be, in any political sense, either conservative or liberal, or revolutionary. Conservatism is too often conservation of the wrong things: liberalism a relaxation of discipline; revolution a denial of the permanent things.
|
|
politics
culture
|
T.S. Eliot |
5f1d622
|
The surgeons' market is imaginary, since there is nothing wrong with women's faces or bodies that social change won't cure; so the surgeons depend for their income on warping female self-perception and multiplying female self-hatred.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
55c3c4a
|
In Europe the rich are refined enough to act as if they're not wealthy. That is how civilized people behave. If you ask me, being cultured and civilized is not about everyone being free and equal; it's about everyone being refined enough to act as if they were. Then no one has to feel guilty.
|
|
equality
refinement
wealthy
rich
culture
guilt
|
Orhan Pamuk |
e2296f1
|
There is a difference between the inmates of your criminal prisons and the inmates of your cultural prison: The former understand that the distribution of wealth and power inside the prison had nothing to do with justice.
|
|
evolutionary-process
culture
prison
|
Daniel Quinn |
79a680b
|
Storytelling awakens us to that which is real. Honest. . . . it transcends the individual. . . . Those things that are most personal are most general, and are, in turn, most trusted. Stories bind. . . . They are basic to who we are. A story composite personality which grows out of its community. It maintains a stability within that community, providing common knowledge as to how things are, how things should be -- knowledge based on experience. These stories become the conscience of the group. They belong to everyone.
|
|
story
culture
conscience
|
Terry Tempest Williams |
1089517
|
The greatest discovery any alien anthropologist could make about our culture is our overriding response to failure:
|
|
progress
culture
failure
|
Daniel Quinn |
f21dbf5
|
"Why does the social order feel the need to defend itself by evading the fact of real women, our faces and voices and bodies, and reducing the meaning of women to these formulaic and endlessly reproduced "beautiful" images? Though unconscious personal anxieties can be a powerful force in the creation of a vital lie, economic necessity practically guarantees it. An economy that depends on slavery needs to promote images of slaves that "justify" the institution of slavery. Western economies are absolutely dependent now on the continued underpayment of women. An idealogy that makes women feel "worth less" was urgently needed to counteract the way feminism had begun to make us feel worth more. This does not require a conspiracy; merely an atmosphere. The contemporary economy depends right now on the representation of women within the beauty myth."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
099caf6
|
"I was having dinner...in London...when eventually he got, as the Europeans always do, to the part about "Your country's never been invaded." And so I said, "Let me tell you who those bad guys are. They're us. WE BE BAD. We're the baddest-assed sons of bitches that ever jogged in Reeboks. We're three-quarters grizzly bear and two-thirds car wreck and descended from a stock market crash on our mother's side. You take your Germany, France, and Spain, roll them all together and it wouldn't give us room to park our cars. We're the big boys, Jack, the original, giant, economy-sized, new and improved butt kickers of all time. When we snort coke in Houston, people lose their hats in Cap d'Antibes. And we've got an American Express card credit limit higher than your piss-ant metric numbers go. You say our country's never been invaded? You're right, little buddy. Because I'd like to see the needle-dicked foreigners who'd have the guts to try. We drink napalm to get our hearts started in the morning. A rape and a mugging is our way of saying 'Cheerio.' Hell can't hold our sock-hops. We walk taller, talk louder, spit further, fuck longer and buy more things than you know the names of. I'd rather be a junkie in a New York City jail than king, queen, and jack of all Europeans. We eat little countries like this for breakfast and shit them out before lunch."
|
|
politics
nationality
europeans
americans
culture
europe
|
P.J. O'Rourke |
f9090c3
|
"Self-denial can lock women into a smug and critical condescension to other, less devout women. According to Appel, cult members develop..."an attitude of moral superiority, a contempt for secular laws, rigidity of thought, and the diminution of regard for the individual." A premium is placed on conformity to the cult group; deviation is penalized. "Beauty" is derivative; conforming to the Iron Maiden [an intrinsically unattainable standard of beauty that is then used to punish women physically and psychologically for failure to achieve and conform to it] is "beautiful." The aim of beauty thinking, about weight or age, is rigid female thought. Cult members are urged to sever all ties with the past: "I destroyed all my fat photographs!"; "It's a new me!"
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
dieting
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
dbba160
|
"Healthy" and "diseased," as Susan Sontag points out...are often subjective judgments that society makes for its own purposes. Women have long been defined as sick as a means of subjecting them to social control."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
544bdf3
|
"She may resent because she resents feeling ugly in sex--or, if "beautiful," her body defined and diminished by pornography. It inhibits in her something she needs to live, and gives her the ultimate anaphrodisiac: the self-critical sexual gaze. Alice Walker's essay "Coming Apart" investigates the damage done: Comparing herself to her lover's pornography, her heroine "foolishly" decides that she is not beautiful."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
6590c25
|
And she says she wants to expose me to all these great things. And to tell you the truth, I don't really want to be exposed to all these great things if it means that I'll have to hear Mary Elizabeth talk about all the great things she exposed me to all the time. I don't understand that. I would give someone a record so they could love the record, not so they would always know that I gave it to them.
|
|
philosophy
culture
|
Stephen Chbosky |
f1632f7
|
"At least a third of a woman's life is marked with aging; about a third of her body is made of fat. Both symbols are being transformed into operable condition-- women will only feel healthy if we are two thirds of the women we could be. How can an "ideal" be about women if it is defined as how much of a female sexual characteristic show on her body, and how much of a female life show on her face?"
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
4170748
|
One-third to one-half of humanity are said to go to bed hungry every night. In the Old Stone Age the fraction must have been much smaller. This is the era of hunger unprecedented. Now, in the time of the greatest technical power, is starvation an institution. Reverse another venerable formula: the amount of hunger increases relatively and absolutely with the evolution of culture.
|
|
evolution
stone-age
starvation
hunger
culture
hunters
technology
|
Marshall Sahlins |
2f45c1b
|
"Beauty" and sexuality are both commonly misunderstood as some transcendent inevitable fact; falsely interlocking the two makes it seem doubly true that a woman must be "beautiful" to be sexual. That of course is not true at all. The definitions of both "beautiful" and "sexual" constantly change to serve the social order, and the connection between the two is a recent invention."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
1c77d37
|
Any writer, I suppose, feels that the world into which he was born is nothing less than a conspiracy against the cultivation of his talent--which attitude certainly has a great deal to support it. On the other hand, it is only because the world looks on his talent with such frightening indifference that the artist is compelled to make his talent important.
|
|
writing
society
culture
talent
|
James Baldwin |
0020224
|
Young women today feel vulnerable to judgment; if a harsh sentence is passed (or even suspected or projected), it is not her reputation that suffers so much as the stability of her moral universe. They did not have long to explore the sexual revolution and make it their own. Before the old chains had grown cold, while young women were still rubbing the circulation back into their ankles and taking tentative steps forward, the beauty industries levied a heavy toll on further investigations, and beauty pornography offered them designer bondage.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
8dd27c8
|
Argumentation is a human enterprise that is embedded in a larger social and psychological context. This context includes (1) the total psyches of the two persons engaged in dialogue, (2) the relationship between the two persons, (3) the immediate situation in which they find themselves and (4) the larger social, cultural and historical situation surrounding them.
|
|
relationships
dialogue
culture
sociology
psychology
|
Peter Kreeft |
360d9d7
|
Once upon a time there were mass media, and they were wicked, of course, and there was a guilty party. Then there were the virtuous voices that accused the criminals. And Art (ah, what luck!) offered alternatives, for those who were not prisoners to the mass media. Well, it's all over. We have to start again from the beginning, asking one another what's going on.
|
|
mass-media
superficiality
culture
|
Umberto Eco |
cbe9f7b
|
Culture is not trivial. It is not a decoration or artifice, the songs we sing or even the prayers we chant. It is a blanket of comfort that gives meaning to lives. It is a body of knowledge that allows the individual to make sense out of the infinite sensations of consciousness, to find meaning and order in a universe that ultimately has neither. Culture is a body of laws and traditions, a moral and ethical code that insulates a people from the barbaric heart that lies just beneath the surface of all human societies and indeed all human beings. Culture alone allows us to reach, as Abraham Lincoln said, for the better angels of our nature.
|
|
culture
|
Wade Davis |
1795576
|
"Where woman do not fit the Iron Maiden [societal expectations/assumptions about women's bodies], we are now being called monstrous, and the Iron Maiden is exactly that which no woman fits, or fits forever. A woman is being asked to feel like a monster now though she is whole and fully physically functional. The surgeons are playing on the myth's double standard for the function of the body. A man's thigh is for walking, but a woman's is for walking and looking "beautiful." If women can walk but believe our limbs look wrong, we feel that our bodies cannot do what they are meant to do; we feel as genuinely deformed and disabled as the unwilling Victorian hypochondriac felt ill."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
fc54b28
|
The clearest way to see through a culture is to attend to its tools for conversation.
|
|
culture
media
|
Neil Postman |
be0c072
|
"Most women are all too familiar with men like Calvin Smith. Men whose sense of prerogative renders them deaf when women say, "No thanks," "Not interested," or even "Fuck off, creep."
|
|
rape
feminism
women-s-rights
women
assault
assaults
catcalling
disrespect
men-s-behavior
personal-experiences
personal-space
predatory-behavior
problems-in-the-world
problems-of-today
problems-with-men
problems-with-society
saying-no
street-harassment
verbal-abuse
women-s-experiences
women-s-issues
personal-experience
predators
personal-autonomy
sexual-assault
misogynist
harassment
sexual-violence
victims
behavior
misogyny
gender-roles
communication
culture
not-listening
rapists
rape-culture
men-and-women
women-and-men
gender
sexuality
sexual-abuse
survivors
sexism
|
Jon Krakauer |
f0986f9
|
Ugster vinyl pumps, Partridge Family records, plastic daisy jewelry, old postcards. . . . It's a magpie Christmas market.
|
|
culture
|
Francesca Lia Block |
cf3990d
|
The arts can sharpen the vision, quicken the intellect, preserve the memory, activate the conscience, enhance the understanding and refresh the language.
|
|
culture
|
Steve Turner |
72f1624
|
Also she went in for culture, which gave her a certain moral authority. It wouldn't now; but people believed, then, that culture could make you better - a better person. They believed it could uplift you, or the women believed it. They hadn't yet seen Hitler at the opera house.
|
|
hitler
culture
|
Margaret Atwood |
a0f0707
|
If you could forget mortality... You could really believe that time is circular, and not linear and progressive as our culture is bent on proving. Seen in geological perspective, we are fossils in the making, to be buried and eventually exposed again for the puzzlement of creatures of later eras.
|
|
literature
culture
|
Wallace Stegner |
f67b906
|
Sexual satisfaction eases the stranglehold of materialism, since status symbols no longer look sexual, but irrelevant. Product lust weakens where emotional and sexual lust intensifies. The price we pay for artificially buoying up this market is our heart's desire. The beauty myth keeps a gap of fantasy between men and women. That gap is made with mirrors; no law of nature supports it. It keeps us spending vast sums of money and looking distractedly around us, but its smoke and reflection interfere with our freedom to be sexually ourselves.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
0f526ed
|
Nobody can understand the greatness of the thirteenth century, who does not realize that it was a great growth of new things produced by a living thing. In that sense it was really bolder and freer than what we call the renaissance, which was a resurrection of old things discovered in a dead thing... and the Gospel according to St. Thomas... was a new thrust like the titanic thrust of Gothic engineering; and its strength was in a God that makes all things new.
|
|
history
thirteenth-century
renaissance
civilization
culture
europe
|
G.K. Chesterton |
15fd1c2
|
We are all of us, to some degree or another, brainwashed by the society we live in. We are able to see this when we travel to another country, and are able to catch a glimpse of our own country with foreign eyes.. the best we can hope for is that a kindly friend from another culture will enable us to look at our culture with dispassionate eyes.
|
|
truth
doris-lessing
indoctrination
culture
|
Doris Lessing |
3f930c5
|
Foreign behavior? What the fuck are you talking about? Foreign behavior? Have you read Things Fall Apart? Ifemulu asked, wishing she had not told Ranyinudo about Dike. She was angrier with Ranyinudo than she had ever been, yet she knew that Ranyinudo meant well, and had said what many other Nigerians would say, which was why she had not told anyone else about Dike's suicide attempt since she came back.
|
|
immigration
culture
home
perception
|
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie |
1bc531c
|
"In a sexual double standard as to who receives consumer protection, it seems that if what you do is done to women in the name of beauty, you may do what you like. It is illegal to claim that something grows hair, or makes you taller, or restores virility, if it does not. It is difficult to imagine that the baldness remedy Minoxidil would be on the market if it had killed nine French and at least eleven American men. In contrast, the long-term effects of Retin-A are still unknown--Dr. Stuart Yusps of the National Cancer Institute refers to its prescription as "a human experiment"--and the Food and Drug Administration has not approved it yet dermatologists are prescribing it to women at a revenue of over $150 million a year." --
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
a7c9f2c
|
It's too late to be studying Hebrew; it's more important to understand even the slang of today.
|
|
being-informed
modern-speech
slang
culture
technology
|
Henry David Thoreau |
71a86d9
|
To make them forget how bad human beings are, they were taught too insistently that bears are good. Instead of being told honestly what humans are and what bears are.
|
|
man
nature
culture
|
Umberto Eco |
00c53ae
|
"Never," enjoins a women's magazine, "mention the size of his [penis] in public...and never, ever let him know that anyone else knows or you may find it shrivels up and disappears, serving you right." That quotation acknowledges that critical sexual comparison is a direct anaphrodisiac when applied to men; either we do not yet recognize that it has exactly the same effect on women, or we do not care, or . A man is unlikely to be brought within earshot of women as they judge men's appearance, height, muscle tone, sexual technique, penis size, personal grooming, or taste in clothes--all of which we do. The fact is that women are able to view men just as men view women, as objects for sexual and aesthetic evaluation; we too are effortlessly able to choose the male "ideal" from a lineup and if we could have male beauty as well as everything else, most of us would not say no. But so what? Given all that, women make the choice, by and large, to take men as human beings first."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
9c0bbde
|
If you've a notion of what man's heart is, wouldn't you say that maybe the whole effort of man on earth to build a civilization is simply man's frantic and frightened attempt to hide himself from himself? That there is a part of man that man wants to reject? That man wants to keep from knowing what he is? That he wants to protect himself from seeing that he is something awful? And that this 'awful' part of himself might not be as awful as he thinks, but he finds it too strange and he does not know what to do with it? We talk about what to do with the atom bomb...But man's heart, his spirit is the deadliest thing in creation. Are not all cultures and civilizations just screens which men have used to divide themselves, to put between that part of themselves which they are afraid of and that part of themselves which they wish, in their deep timidity, to try to preserve? Are not all of man's efforts at order an attempt to still man's fear of himself?
|
|
man
fear
philosophy
culture
|
Richard Wright |
fa432e3
|
Those of us in the first American generations have had to figure out how the invisible world the emigrants built around our childhoods fits in solid America.
|
|
assimiliation
emigrants
culture-identity
immigrants
culture
|
Maxine Hong Kingston |
6bf5fc8
|
I should go so far as to say that embedded in the surrealistic frame of a television news show is a theory of anticommunication, featuring a type of discourse that abandons logic, reason, sequence and rules of contradiction. In aesthetics, I believe the name given to this theory is Dadaism; in philosophy, nihilism; in psychiatry, schizophrenia. In the parlance of the theater, it is known as vaudeville.
|
|
television
philosophy
public-discourse
epistemology
culture
ideology
|
Neil Postman |
295caa3
|
Every cuisine has its characteristic 'flavor principle,' Rozin contends, whether it is tomato-lemon-oregano in Greece; lime-chili in Mexico; onion-lard-paprika in Hungary, or, in Samin's Moroccan dish, cumin-coriander-cinnamon-ginger-onion-fruit. (And in America? Well, we do have Heinz ketchup, a flavor principle in a bottle that kids, or their parents, use to domesticate every imaginable kind of food. We also now have the familiar salty-umami taste of fast food, which I would guess is based on salt, soy oil, and MSG.
|
|
flavor
cuisine
taste
culture
|
Michael Pollan |
6b98bbd
|
For no medium is excessively dangerous if its users understand what its dangers are. It is not important that those who ask the questions arrive at my answers or Marshall McLuhan's (quite different answers, by the way). This is an instance in which the asking of the questions is sufficient. To ask is to break the spell.
|
|
culture
ideology
technology
|
Neil Postman |
cade64d
|
Culture and collars had gone together, to him, and he had been deceived into believing that college educations and mastery were the same things.
|
|
illusion
education
culture
|
Jack London |
d2aee33
|
She missed -- without knowing what she missed-- paints and crayons
|
|
poverty
culture
|
Toni Morrison |
1c57427
|
Black people are not the descendants of kings. We are--and I say this with big pride--the progeny of slaves. If there's any majesty in our struggle, it lies not in fairy tales but in those humble origins and the great distance we've traveled since. Ditto for the dreams of a separate but noble past. Cosby's, and much of black America's, conservative analysis flattens history and smooths over the wrinkles that have characterized black America since its inception.
|
|
race-and-racism-in-america
political-philosophy
culture
|
Ta-Nehisi Coates |
ad6ba8e
|
Moreover, we have seen enough by now to know that technological changes in our modes of communication are even more ideology-laden than changes in our modes of transportation. Introduce the alphabet to a culture and you change its cognitive habits, its social relations, its notions of community, history and religion. Introduce the printing press with movable type, and you do the same. Introduce speed-of-light transmission of images and you make a cultural revolution. Without a vote. Without polemics. Without guerrilla resistance. Here is ideology, pure if not serene. Here is ideology without words, and all the more powerful for their absence. All that is required to make it stick is a population that devoutly believes in the inevitability of progress. And in this sense, all Americans are Marxists, for we believe nothing if not that history is moving us toward some preordained paradise and that technology is the force behind that movement.
|
|
progress
television
culture
utopia
ideology
technology
|
Neil Postman |
71ac2be
|
The full measure of a culture embraces both the actions of a people and the quality of their aspirations, the nature of the metaphors that propel their lives. And no description of a people can be complete without reference to the character of their homeland, the ecological and geographical matrix in which they have determined to live out their destiny. Just as a landscape defines character, culture springs from a spirit of place.
|
|
culture
|
Wade Davis |
67bfba9
|
Modern cosmetic surgeons have a direct financial interest in a social role for women that requires them to feel ugly. They do not simply advertise for a share of a market that already exists: Their advertisements create new markets. It is a boom industry because it is influentially placed to create its own demand through the pairing of text with ads in women's magazines. The industry takes out ads and gets coverage; women get cut open. They pay their money and they takes their chances. As surgeons grow richer, they are able to command larger and brighter ad spaces.
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
d601fb1
|
A corollary of this has been that Christians have thought that they should only create art with a Pollyanna quality to it: paintings of birds and kittens, movies that extol family life and end happily, songs that are positive and uplifting - in short, works of art that show a world that is almost unfallen where no one experiences conflict and where sin is naughty rather than wicked.
|
|
faith
culture
|
Steve Turner |
2ef8f8c
|
"Spokespeople sell women the Iron Maiden and name her "Health": if public discourse were really concerned with women's health, it would turn angrily upon this aspect of the beauty myth."
|
|
equality
feminism
beauty
body-image
diets
sexual-violence
cosmetic-surgery
diet-industry
fashion-industry
mass-culture
objectification
plastic-surgery
cosmetics
images
marketing
pornography
society
culture
double-standards
magazines
sexuality
eating-disorders
self-esteem
aging
|
Naomi Wolf |
cac94a0
|
"Failure to put the relationship on a slower timetable may result in an act that was never intended in the first place. Another important principle is to avoid the circumstances where compromise is likely. A girl who wants to preserve her virginity should not find herself in a house or dorm room alone with someone to whom she is attracted. Nor should she single-date with someone she has reason not to trust. A guy who wants to be moral should stay away from the girl he knows would go to bed with him. Remember the words of Solomon to his son, "Keep to a path far from her, do not go near the door of her house" (Proverbs 5:8). I know this advice sounds very narrow in a day when virginity is mocked and chastity is considered old-fashioned. But I don't apologize for it. The Scriptures are eternal, and God's standards of right and wrong do not change with the whims of culture. He will honor and help those who are trying to follow His commandments. In fact, the apostle Paul said, "He will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear" (1Corinthians 10:13). Hold that promise and continue to use your head. You'll be glad you did."
|
|
words
wrong
trying
relationship
reason
trust
change
who
act
apostle
are
attracted
away
bear
beyond
can
chastity
commandments
considered
continue
did
door
do
eternal
glad
go
god-s
intended
is
knows
let
likely
mocked
narrow
near
proberbs
remeber
scriptures
single-date
slower
sounds
stay
tempted
those
very
what-you
whims
whom
would
you-ll
your
guy
and
day
you
with
old-fashioned
principle
keep
may
he
her
compromise
bed
first
never
avoid
advice
should
circumstances
place
not
to
preserve
important
use
hold
result
head
help
alone
follow
virginity
house
she
culture
wants
solomon
path
girl
paul
moral
son
be
someone
will
promise
honor
right
failure
him
standards
|
James C. Dobson |
24e162d
|
Since the values of the market were the highest criteria, persons also became valued as commodities which could be bought and sold. A person's worth is then his salable market value, whether it is skill or 'personality' that is up for sale. [...] The market value, then, becomes the individual's valuation of himself, so that self-confidence and 'self-feeling' (ones experience of identity with one's self) are largely reflections of what others think of one, in this case the 'others' being those who represent the market. Thus contemporary economic processes have contributed not only to an alienation of man from man, but likewise to 'self-alienation' - an alienation of the individual from himself. As Fromm very well summarizes the point: Since modern man experiences himself both as the seller and as the commodity to be sold on the market, his self-esteem depends on conditions beyond his control. If he is 'successful,' he is valuable; if he is not, he is worthless. The degree of insecurity which results from this orientation can hardly be overestimated. If one feels that one's own value is not constituted primarily by the human qualities one possesses, but by one's succes on a competitive market with ever-changing conditions, one's self-esteem is bound to be shaky and in constant need of confirmation by others. [Erich Fromm, Man for himself] In such a situation one is driven to strive relentlessly for 'succes'; this is the chief way to validate ones self and to allay anxiety. And any failure in the competitive struggle is a threat to the quasi-esteem for one's self - which, quasi though it be, is all one has in such a situation. This obviously leads to powerful feelings of helplessness and inferiority. [p.169f]
|
|
self-wort
society
culture
capitalism
self-esteem
|
Rollo May |
2471643
|
He did not consider public opinion to be accurate at long range.
|
|
conventional-wisdom
culture
|
Stephen Crane |
1ce64a0
|
"I guess that's how they were able to do it, in the way they did, all at once, without anyone knowing beforehand. If there had still been portable money, it would have been more difficult. "It was after the catastrophe, when they shot the president and machine-gunned the Congress and the army declared a state of emergency. They blamed it on the Islamic fanatics, at the time. "Keep calm, they said on television. Everything is under control. "I was stunned. Everyone was, I know that. It was hard to believe. The entire government, gone like that. How did they get in, how did it happen? "That was when they suspended the Constitution. They said it would be temporary. There wasn't even any rioting in the streets. People stayed at home at night, watching television, looking for some direction. There wasn't even an enemy you could point your finger at. ... "Newspapers were censored and some were closed down, for security reasons they said. The roadblocks began to appear, and Identipasses. Everyone approved of that, since it was obvious you couldn't be too careful."
|
|
feminism
future
reproduction
culture
media
newspapers
|
Margaret Atwood |
cef7f0e
|
I never learned to say shit before a lady. I don't believe in progress in quite the way you seem to. You believe in it more than Grandmother did. As for those purely cultural patterns of convention you think I ought to escape from, they happen to add up to civilization, and I'd rather be civilized than tribal or uncouth.
|
|
progress
tribalism
grandparents
convention
culture
|
Wallace Stegner |
b4cb66f
|
Government observers, keen on getting the Penan out of the valuable hardwood forests, have claimed that Penan health is poor and that they are malnourished. This is a ploy to get them settled so they can be controlled. Also, it is a source of embarrassment to the governments of Malaysia and Indonesia that in the 1980s, nomadic hunters are still roaming the jungles. This doesn't help the national image of a modern, developing country.
|
|
politics
culture
|
Eric Hansen |
b00c990
|
I was persisting in reading my present environment in the light of my old one.
|
|
adaptation
defense-mechanism
enculturation
evolved-consciousness
flinch
defense
evolving
culture
|
Richard Wright |
41fc25a
|
A poem, novel, or play acquires all of humanity's disorders, including the fear of mortality
|
|
depravity
heritage
culture
|
Harold Bloom |
909a414
|
After 1968 the restored communist regime required all Czech rock musicians to sit a written exam in Marxism Leninism
|
|
influence
culture
propaganda
|
Niall Ferguson |
6258b59
|
"Economics itself offers a parallel that explains why this integration affects creativity. Clay Christensen has written about the "Innovator's Dilemma": the fact that large traditional firms find it rational to ignore new, breakthrough technologies that compete with their core business. The same analysis could help explain why large, traditional media companies will undermine our tradition of free culture. The property right that is copyright is no longer the balanced right that it was, or was intended to be. The property right that is copyright has become unbalanced, tilted toward an extreme. The opportunity to create and transform becomes weakened in a world in which creation requires permission and creativity must check with a lawyer."
|
|
culture
creativity
|
Lawrence Lessig |
08842bc
|
"First of all understand that I get it. That there are millions and millions of women who are steely eyed realists. And millions and millions of men who are anything but. However. For lack of a better term I would say that the feminine values are the values of america : Sensitivity is more important than Truth. Feelings are more important than Facts. Commitment is more important than Individuality. Children are more important than People. Safety is more important than Fun.
|
|
truth-telling
marriage
feminism
truth
marriage-humor
married-men
mens-rights
the-red-pill
culture
masculinity
femininity
|
Bill Maher |
9b709a6
|
New Rule: The White House doesn't have to release the dead Bin Laden photos, but don't pretend we can't take it. We've seen pictures of Britney Spears's vagina getting out of a car. Television has desensitizes us to violence, and porn has desensitized us to people getting shot in the eye.
|
|
violence
humor
osama-bin-laden
porn
culture
|
Bill Maher |
21b5707
|
The feeling of a place was the best reason to go.
|
|
travel
culture
tourism
|
Robert Kurson |
cfd0bde
|
I have a feeling that we've seen the dismantling of civilisation, brick by brick, and now we're looking into the void. We thought that we were liberating people from oppressive cultural circumstances, but we were, in fact, taking something away from them. We were killing off civility and concern. We were undermining all those little ties of loyalty and consideration and affection that are necessary for human flourishing. We thought that tradition was bad, that it created hidebound societies, that it held people down. But, in fact, what tradition was doing all along was affirming community and the sense that we are members of one another. Do we really love and respect one another more in the absence of tradition and manners and all the rest? Or have we merely converted one another into moral strangers - making our countries nothing more than hotels for the convenience of guests who are required only to avoid stepping on the toes of other guests?
|
|
nationalism
civilization
society
culture
tradition
|
Alexander McCall Smith |
13485d4
|
The stakes in this game are not low. Our enterprise is no less than the introduction of an alternative language, and with the language an altered perspective, for a group of phenomena that tradition tended to refer to with such words as 'spirituality', 'piety', 'morality', 'ethics' and 'asceticism'. If the manoeuvre succeeds, the conventional concept of religion, that ill-fated bugbear from the prop studios of modern Europe, will emerge from these investigations as the great loser. Certainly intellectual history has always resembled a refuge for malformed concepts - and after the following journey through the various stations, one will not only see through the concept of 'religion' in its failed design, a concept whose crookedness is second only to the hyper-bugbear that is 'culture'.
|
|
morality
spirituality
religion
piety
culture
ethics
practising
|
Peter Sloterdijk |
f7057a0
|
God does not save us to make us forget our heritage, but to complete it.
|
|
personality
ministry
culture
|
Beth Moore |
ce5cc3f
|
Criminologists have documented that the amount of coverage a crime victim receives affects how much attention police devote to the case and the willingness of prosecutors to accept plea bargains.
|
|
fear
teen-moms
minorities
culture
drugs
|
Barry Glassner |
243107b
|
"Yes, you are Eskimo," he had said. "And never forget it. We live as no other people can, for we truly understand the earth."
|
|
eskimo
culture
remember
|
Jean Craighead George |
ada172e
|
One mark of originality that can win canonical status for a literary work is strangeness that we either never altogether assimilate, or that becomes such a given that we are blinded to its idiosyncrasies.
|
|
reading
bias
conventional-wisdom
perspective
culture
|
Harold Bloom |
1a0e8ef
|
We go back to the Dark Ages! The crust of learning and good manners and tolerance is so thin! It would just take a few thousand big shells and gas bombs to wipe out all the eager young men, and all the libraries and historical archives and patent offices, all the laboratories and art galleries, all the castles and Periclean temples and Gothic cathedrals, all the cooperative stores and motor factories--every storehouse of learning. No inherent reason why Sissy's grandchildren--if anybody's grandchildren will survive at all--shouldn't be living in caves and heaving rocks at catamounts.
|
|
dark-ages
culture
fragility
|
Sinclair Lewis |
acedf70
|
As the final decade of the millennium dawned, there would be no greater expression of the cultural, economic, and social revolutions to come than fashion. What rock 'n' roll was to the '50s, drugs to the '60s, film to the '70s, and modern art to the '80s, fashion was to the '90s: the fuse, then the filter.
|
|
history
fashion-industry
culture
fashion
|
Maureen Callahan |
33b77c7
|
"writers like Jack Kerouac (who called himself an "urban Thoreau") set forth to redefine and rediscover ways to live in America without slogging through what Kerouac called the endless system of "work, produce, consume, work, produce, consume..."
|
|
beats
kerouac
culture
consumerism
|
Elizabeth Gilbert |
40e4337
|
"First of all understand that I get it. That there are millions and millions of women who are steely eyed realists. And millions and millions of men who are anything but. However. For lack of a better term I would say that the feminine values are the values of america : Sensitivity is more important than Truth. Feeling are more important than Facts. Commitment is more important than Individuality. Children are more important than People. Safety is more important than Fun.
|
|
truth-telling
marriage
feminism
truth
marriage-humor
married-men
mens-rights
the-red-pill
culture
masculinity
femininity
|
Bill Maher |
fa1b661
|
Reviewing bad books is bad for the character - WH Auden
|
|
influence
reading
culture
|
Harold Bloom |
dc8e6ee
|
Pardon me, but my father says that it is a lie that Americans have everything. You have no sheep, no goats, no trees, no oil, no vines, no wine, not even chickens. He asks, 'What kind of life is that?' He says, 'No wonder you don't sing or dance or recite poetry very often.
|
|
life
meaningfulness
culture
|
Robert Fulghum |
a124dc5
|
Your blanks have been filled in far differently from those of a child grown up in the filth and poverty
|
|
conventional-wisdom
culture
parenthood
|
John Howard Griffin |
545cd59
|
Great writing is always rewriting or revisionism, and is founded on a reading that clears space for the self.
|
|
originally
heritage
legacy
culture
|
Harold Bloom |
e42bc4f
|
Memory is always in art, even when it works involuntarily.
|
|
emotion
distortion
culture
perception
|
Harold Bloom |
ea2a068
|
My voice thick with frustration, I declared that if men and women could only meet each other under normal circumstances, that delusions of instant love would be more infrequent. While I do believe that great attractions lead to genuine love, such as it had with my sister, Sara, and her husband, Assad, such a happy outcome is rare. When men and women rarely have the opportunity to enjoy the other's company in ordinary social occasions, spontaneous emotions are quick to rise to the surface, often ending in terrible personal tragedies.
|
|
feminism
women
royal-family
culture
|
Jean Sasson |
8542bd3
|
The person who distrusts himself has no touchstone for reality - for this touchstone can be only oneself. Such a person interpose between himself and reality nothing less than a labyrinth of attitudes. And these attitudes, furthermore, though the person is usually unaware of it (is unaware of so much), are historical and public attitudes.
|
|
introjects
received-values
society
culture
self-deception
|
James Baldwin |
868f0a3
|
During the first millennium BCE, even the beer-loving Mesopotamians turned their backs on beer, which was dethroned as the most cultured and civilized of drinks, and the age of wine began.
|
|
mesopotamia
civilization
culture
wine
|
Tom Standage |
0a38aaf
|
correlation between the growing lack of respect for ideas and the imagination and the increasing gap between rich and poor in America, reflected not just in the gulf between the salaries of CEOs and their employees but also in the high cost of education, the incredible divide between private and public schools that makes all of the fine speeches by our policy makers-- most of whom send their children to private schools anyway, just as they enjoy the benefits and perks of their jobs as servants of the people-- all the more insidious and insincere.
|
|
reading
imagination
education
art
culture
|
Azar Nafisi |
0e51b0b
|
"Every little thing makes a difference, whether you decide it yourself or whether it's pure accident. So many people have had the whole course of their lives changed by something perfectly simple like, let's say, crossing the street at one point instead of another." "Yes, yes, yes, I know," Stenham said with exaggerated weariness. "As far as I'm concerned that's just as boring, and a lot more false, by the way. The point I'm trying to make is that he loves his world of Koranic law because it's his, and at the same time he hates it because his intuition tells him it's at the end of its rope. He can't expect anything more from it. And our world, he hates that too, just on general principles, and yet it's his only hope, the only way out--if there is one for him personally, which I doubt."
|
|
french-morocco
western-dominion
koran
western-civilization
morocco
modernism
imperialism
relativism
way-of-life
culture
modernity
|
Paul Bowles |
3afe6b5
|
Just as Prometheus delivered stolen fire to man, so Eve, and the serpent, delivered man into self-consciousness, setting him up, were it not for his short lifespan, as rival to God. At the same time, man's self-consciousness removed him from nature into a life of toil, doubt, fear, guilt, shame, blame, enmity, loneliness, and frailty--and the product of this separation, the fruit and flower of this exile, is, of course, culture. 'God,' said the writer Victor Hugo, 'made only water, but man made wine.
|
|
religion
creation-myths
greek-mythology
culture
consciousness
wine
|
Neel Burton |
a7f2867
|
Strong prejudices in an ill-formed mind are hazardous to government.
|
|
culture
|
Barbara W. Tuchman |
ff8b346
|
No single characteristic ever overtakes an entire society.
|
|
overgeneralization
remnant
culture
|
Barbara W. Tuchman |
7495e1c
|
Malignant phenomena do not come out of a golden age.
|
|
depravity
perspective
culture
|
Barbara W. Tuchman |
412df09
|
the most lovable of exceptional American qualities (is) our tradition of insisting that we are part of the middle class, even if we aren't, and of interacting with our fellow citizens as if we were all middle class.
|
|
culture
humility
|
Charles Murray |
e6f85f4
|
What is even more astonishing is that the entire science of wayfinding is based on dead reckoning. You only know where you are by knowing precisely where you have been and how you got to where you are.
|
|
travel
history
science
culture
|
Wade Davis |
510f610
|
Cook with butter in the North, olive oil in the South.
|
|
culture-identity
french-culture
olive-oil
culture
france
|
Alain Bremond-Torrent |
57b6500
|
We live in a culture of complaint because everyone is always looking for things to complain about. It's all tied in with the desire to blame others for misfortunes and to get some form of compensation into the bargain.
|
|
u-s-education
complaints
culture
|
Alexander McCall Smith |
6a8ad5a
|
I had also developed my own culture. Work. Over the years, I had taken labor as my companion and had moved everything else to the side.
|
|
live
work
life
important
culture
|
Mitch Albom |
dc8b39c
|
The people had once created the city. The city now created the people, or, more exactly, the people of Venice now identified themselves more in terms of the city. The private had become public.
|
|
culture
|
Peter Ackroyd |
92fa615
|
If man were infinitely malleable, there would have been nor revolutions; there would have been no change because a culture would have succeeded in making man submit to its patterns without resistance. But man, being only relatively malleable, has always reacted with protest against conditions which made the disequilibrium between the social order and his human needs too drastic or unbearable. The attempt to reduce this disequilibrium and the need to establish a more acceptable and desirable solution is at the very core of the dynamism of the evolution of man in history. Man's protest arose not only because of material suffering; specifically human needs...are an equally strong motivation for revolution and the dynamics of change.
|
|
evolution
politics
malleability
receptiveness
society
culture
revolution
resistance
|
Erich Fromm |
03a9bd8
|
There is no room for rosy eyed acceptance of the cultural decay around us. Highly suspect will be any Christian literary and cultural critic who makes too much room for Lady Gaga, Harry Potter, Hester Prynne, Huckleberry Finn, James Bond, Katniss Everdeen, Joe Brooks, Leroy Van Dyke, and Star Trek: Into Darkness. Those who enthusiastically embrace these cultural icons appear to be happy with the macro-cultural trends of the Christian apostate world. That being the case, what does this say about their faith, their worldview, and their own cultural trajectories? Could it be that they have embraced the tattooed Jesus---the false Christs of culture? Indeed, many have been wooed by a false prophet, a false priest, a false redeemer, and a false king. They have been rescued from the wrong sins and have taken on the wrong view of reality, truth, and. ethics. They have embraced the wrong religion, and they have joined the apostasy.
|
|
christianity
pop-culture
culture
|
Kevin Swanson |
5ebd0d1
|
From all accounts, it seems the faithful opposition is reduced to Gideon's 300. The day has arrived for Christians to engage the battle...From now on, true Christians will engage the battle of ideas in academy. The time for giving up ground is over. Now we must fight. We must engage the [B]iblical worldview vigorously in the world of great literature. The greatests wars ever fought in history are not those fought by sword or artillery. The greatest battles are engaged in the realm of ideas
|
|
dominion
postmillenial
postmillenialism
worldview
culture
|
Kevin Swanson |
7bfe75c
|
"Criminals beheaded in Palermo, heretics burned alive in Toledo, assassins drawn and quartered in Paris--Europeans flocked to every form of painful death imaginable, free entertainment that drew huge crowds. London, the historian Fernand Braudel tells us, held public executions eight times a year at Tyburn, just north of Hyde Park. (The diplomat Samuel Pepys paid a shilling for a good view of a Tyburn hanging in 1664; watching the victim beg for mercy, he wrote, was a crowd of "at least 12 or 14,000 people.") In most if not all European nations, the bodies were impaled on city walls and strung along highways as warnings. "The corpses dangling from trees whose distant silhouettes stand out against the sky, in so many old paintings, are merely a realistic detail," Braudel observed. "They were part of the landscape." Between 1530 and 1630, according to Cambridge historian V.A.C. Gatrell, England executed seventy-five thousand people. At that time, its population was about three million, perhaps a tenth that of the Mexica empire. Arithmetic suggests that if England had been the size of the Triple Alliance, it would have executed, on average, 7,500 people per year, roughly twice the number Cortes estimated for the empire. France and Spain were still more bloodthirsty than England, according to Braudel."
|
|
history
human-sacrifice
culture
europe
|
Charles C. Mann |
8d4368e
|
"After the first Neanderthal skeletal remains were identified in Europe in the nineteenth century it was, for a very long while, one of the fundamental unquestioned assumptions of archaeology, a matter taken to be self-evidently true, that other "older," "less-evolved" human species never attained, or even in their wildest dreams could hope to aspire, to the same levels of cultural development as . During more than a century of subsequent analysis, and despite multiple additional discoveries, the Neanderthals continued to be depicted as nothing more than brutal, shambling, stupid subhumans--literally morons by comparison with ourselves. Since the beginning of the second decade of the twenty-first century, however, and with increasing certainty as the evidence has become overwhelming, a new "image" of the Neanderthals as sensitive, intelligent, symbolic, and creative beings capable of advanced thought processes and technological innovations has taken root among archaeologists and is set to become the ruling paradigm."
|
|
assumptions
paradigm
remains
neanderthals
culture
|
Graham Hancock |
e64d4ae
|
We wouldn't expect to gather crucial information about modern cultures from their knives, forks, hammers, and screwdrivers, so why should we suddenly set different standards when we try to understand the ancient world?
|
|
archaeology
culture
|
Graham Hancock |