Skip to main content

Toni Morrison, Emerson, and Cornel West Quotes

That's a totally generous free woman. She's fearless. She's not afraid of anything. She has very few material things. She has a little self-supporting skill that she performs. She doesn't run anybody's life. She's available for almost infinite love. If you need her--she'll deliver. And she has complete clarity about who she is. -- Toni Morrison

The artist cannot and must not take anything for granted, but must drive to the heart of every answer and expose the question the answer hides. We know, in the case of the person, that whoever cannot tell himself the truth about his past is trapped in it, immobilized in the prison of his undiscovered self. This is also true of nations." --"The Creative Process", Baldwin

Whoso would be a man must be a nonconformist. He who would gather immortal palms must not be hindered by the name of goodness, but must explore if it be goodness. Nothing is at last scared but the integrity of your own mind. --"Self-Reliance," Emerson

I am currently reading Cornel West's Democracy Matters: Winning the Fight Against Imperialism, which offers timeless analysis of our sociopolitical affairs. I was inspired by Ebad's high rating of Wests' books on Goodreads, and picked up West based on his recommendations.

I have not thought about democratic tradition, morality, or literature in a long time, and so, I struggle with this book. I struggle with the language, and the momentous ideas. Somehow, despite my current intellectual shortcomings, I approach West's vision with a sense of familiarity, comfort, and above all, gratitude. I feel like I understand his vision--albeit without following his argument---because I remember this vision from a former self, from the community activist-writer-feminist, from my days at Youth Solidarity Summer, or Sadie Nash Leadership Project, places that were very much about social justice, democratic spaces that encouraged transformative personal and political change. I yearn now for the writers, and thinkers that will give me equanimity in troubled financial times, when the materialism of my thoughts and the world seem increasingly heavy on my consciousness. I have forgotten the literature that used to provide me comfort. It is precisely as E.B White's 1934 essay titled, "Dusk in Fierce Pajamas" in the book Fierce Pajamas describes it: reaching for Haper's Bazaar as if it was food and quinine. I am grateful to these writers for articulating truth in various forms.

I am in desperate need of this sort of medicine, and so, have compiled a list of authors/books for the summer--
1) Cornel West
2) Toni Morrison
3) Tocqueville-- Democracy in America (some of the 935 pages)
4) Tariq Ramadan
5) Love the One You're With (chick lit)

Before I start graduate school, I have to get these readings done because there is no leisure reading in graduate school. 

Comments

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

And Today I was Called an Intellectual Whore

Today I was called a intellectual whore. I was told that all i want to do is intellectually screw people because what I like most about people are their ideas, experiences and thoughts. I have shown little regard for emotions, and sentimentality and for the UMPTH time this year, I find myself saddened by the loss of a friend. Here's his top 10 of most (im)memorable quotes: 1. "You're like Sex in the City, minus the sex." [Mindless stupidity is the implication] 2. "I am a warm person. You're not" 3. [paraphrase] I am a very sensitive person. I can't have you constantly hurting my feelings. 4. "I don't respect you" 5. "I am a generous person" 6. "We can't be friends, Sadia." 7. "You are emotionally crippled" 8. "What you need is a wall." 9. "I don't mean to hurt you." 10. "You're an intellectual whore." And the best question of today, and of the week perhaps, is when ...

Why Not Friendship (Revised)- Repost

It is difficult to be merely a friend to a boy who seems more suitable as a husband than a friend. To reduce a potential life partner to a friend is immature and selfish. Friendship is the not the greatest type of relationship, but it is the safest. Friendship allows you to be intimate without the messiness of other things, like physical attraction, etc. Between friends, there is a warm permanence, a fuzziness that can be called appreciation and gratitude. There is also comfort and trust. Friendship is great if only for the possibility that one can know the beauty of another human being. The possibility of that is worth the difficulty of all else. But sometimes friendship is not enough. Sometimes, to reduce someone to friend when he should be much more is an affront to the opportunity God has presented before you. It is like saying to him, I know that we are amazing together, but we should be friends because I am a dumbass. To reduce him to friend also precludes the possibility of love...

Amina Wadud and Dr. Umar Faruq Abd-Allah: Gender, Quran, A reading

If you really are that ambitious, here is a 2660 word essay submitted late for your enjoyment. Gendering the Qu’ran: Analysis of Amina Wadud’s Qur’an and Women (A Draft) “How can ideas that transcend gender be expressed in gendered language?” In her Qur’an and Woman, Amina Wadud asks a hard but uniquely modern question of the timeless text of the Qur’an (xii). She contextualizes the language and ideas of the Qur’an with a model of hermeneutics that is characterized by standard notions to context, grammar, and Weltanschauung, or world view. Rather than simply extend medieval exegesis, Wadud returns to the original text of the Qur’an in order to derive the fundamentals concerning Muslim women, their roles, and responsibilities. She does this through an analysis that is critical of both the cultural context of revelation, as well as the context of classical tafsir, or interpretations of the Qur’an, given that the androcentrism of seventh-century Arabia still pervades society today. She pr...