Susan Sontag Quotes

Best selected Susan Sontag quotes for your inspiration are given below.

In America, the photographer is not simply the person who records the past, but the one who invents it. ~Susan Sontag - Photography
Although none of the rules for becoming more alive is valid, it is healthy to keep on formulating them. ~Susan Sontag - Proverbs
In most modern instances, interpretation amounts to the philistine refusal to leave the work of art alone. Real art has the capacity to make us nervous. By reducing the work of art to its content and then interpreting that, one tames the work of art. Interpretation makes art manageable, conformable. ~Susan Sontag - Critics and Criticism
Perversity is the muse of modern literature. ~Susan Sontag - Literature
Nature in America has always been suspect, on the defensive, cannibalized by progress. In America, every specimen becomes a relic. ~Susan Sontag - Nature
The truth is balance. However the opposite of truth, which is unbalance, may not be a lie. ~Susan Sontag - Truth
The quality of American life is an insult to the possibilities of human growth... the pollution of American space, with gadgetry and cars and TV and box architecture, brutalizes the senses, making gray neurotics of most of us, and perverse spiritual athletes and strident self-transcenders of the best of us. ~Susan Sontag - America
What pornographic literature does is precisely to drive a wedge between one's existence as a full human being and one's existence as a sexual being -- while in ordinary life a healthy person is one who prevents such a gap from opening up. Normally we don't experience, at least don't want to experience, our sexual fulfillment as distinct from or opposed to our personal fulfillment. But perhaps in part they are distinct, whether we like it or not. ~Susan Sontag - Pornography
The hard truth is that what may be acceptable in elite culture may not be acceptable in mass culture, that tastes which pose only innocent ethical issues as the property of a minority become corrupting when they become more established. Taste is context, and the context has changed. ~Susan Sontag - Taste
Cancer patients are lied to, not just because the disease is (or is thought to be) a death sentence, but because it is felt to be obscene -- in the original meaning of that word: ill-omened, abominable, repugnant to the senses. ~Susan Sontag - Cancer
Any critic is entitled to wrong judgments, of course. But certain lapses of judgment indicate the radical failure of an entire sensibility. ~Susan Sontag - Critics and Criticism
AIDS obliges people to think of sex as having, possibly, the direst consequences: suicide. Or murder. ~Susan Sontag - AIDS
Fewer and fewer Americans possess objects that have a patina, old furniture, grandparents pots and pans -- the used things, warm with generations of human touch, essential to a human landscape. Instead, we have our paper phantoms, transistorized landscapes. A featherweight portable museum. ~Susan Sontag - Things and Little Things
What is most beautiful in virile men is sometimes feminine; what is most beautiful in feminine women is something masculine. ~Susan Sontag - Beauty
It is the nature of aphoristic thinking to be always in a state of concluding; a bid to have the final word is inherent in all powerful phrase-making. ~Susan Sontag - Aphorisms and Epigrams
In good films, there is always a directness that entirely frees us from the itch to interpret. ~Susan Sontag - Cinema
AIDS occupies such a large part in our awareness because of what it has been taken to represent. It seems the very model of all the catastrophes privileged populations feel await them. ~Susan Sontag - AIDS
Jews and homosexuals are the outstanding creative minorities in contemporary urban culture. Creative, that is, in the truest sense: they are creators of sensibilities. The two pioneering forces of modern sensibility are Jewish moral seriousness and homosexual aestheticism and irony. ~Susan Sontag - Minorities
American ''energy'' is the energy of violence, of free-floating resentment and anxiety unleashed by chronic cultural dislocations which must be, for the most part, ferociously sublimated. This energy has mainly been sublimated into crude materialism and acquisitiveness. Into hectic philanthropy. Into benighted moral crusades, the most spectacular of which was Prohibition. Into an awesome talent for uglifying countryside and cities. Into the loquacity and torment of a minority of gadflies: artists, prophets, muckrakers, cranks, and nuts. And into self-punishing neuroses. But the naked violence keeps breaking through, throwing everything into question. ~Susan Sontag - America
One set of messages of the society we live in is: Consume. Grow. Do what you want. Amuse yourselves. The very working of this economic system, which has bestowed these unprecedented liberties, most cherished in the form of physical mobility and material prosperity, depends on encouraging people to defy limits. ~Susan Sontag - Society
What pornography is really about, ultimately, isn't sex but death. ~Susan Sontag - Pornography
The taste for worst-case scenarios reflects the need to master fear of what is felt to be uncontrollable. It also expresses an imaginative complicity with disaster. ~Susan Sontag - Pessimism
I do not think white America is committed to granting equality to the American Negro... this is a passionately racist country; it will continue to be so in the foreseeable future. ~Susan Sontag - Race and Racism
A large part of the popularity and persuasiveness of psychology comes from its being a sublimated spiritualism: a secular, ostensibly scientific way of affirming the primacy of ''spirit'' over matter. ~Susan Sontag - Psychology
I envy paranoids; they actually feel people are paying attention to them. ~Susan Sontag - Paranoia
Much of modern art is devoted to lowering the threshold of what is terrible. By getting us used to what, formerly, we could not bear to see or hear, because it was too shocking, painful, or embarrassing, art changes morals. ~Susan Sontag - Arts and Artists
We live under continual threat of two equally fearful, but seemingly opposed, destinies: unremitting banality and inconceivable terror. It is fantasy, served out in large rations by the popular arts, which allows most people to cope with these twin specters. ~Susan Sontag - Fantasy
The problems of this world are only truly solved in two ways: by extinction or duplication. ~Susan Sontag - Problems
The aim of all commentary on art now should be to make works of art -- and, by analogy, our own experience -- more, rather than less, real to us. The function of criticism should be to show how it is what it is, even that it is what it is, rather than to show what it means. ~Susan Sontag - Critics and Criticism
War-making is one of the few activities that people are not supposed to view ''realistically;'' that is, with an eye to expense and practical outcome. In all-out war, expenditure is all-out, unprudent -- war being defined as an emergency in which no sacrifice is excessive. ~Susan Sontag - War
Fear of sexuality is the new, disease-sponsored register of the universe of fear in which everyone now lives. ~Susan Sontag - Sexuality
The best emotions to write out of are anger and fear or dread. The least energizing emotion to write out of is admiration. It is very difficult to write out of because the basic feeling that goes with admiration is a passive contemplative mood. ~Susan Sontag - Writers and Writing
Interpretation is the revenge of the intellect upon art. Even more. It is the revenge of the intellect upon the world. To interpret is to impoverish, to deplete the world -- in order to set up a shadow world of ''meanings.'' ~Susan Sontag - Literary Criticism
A family's photograph album is generally about the extended family and, often, is all that remains of it. ~Susan Sontag - Family
Intelligence is really a kind of taste: taste in ideas. ~Susan Sontag - Intelligence and Intellectuals
Tamed as it may be, sexuality remains one of the demonic forces in human consciousness -- pushing us at intervals close to taboo and dangerous desires, which range from the impulse to commit sudden arbitrary violence upon another person to the voluptuous yearning for the extinction of one's consciousness, for death itself. Even on the level of simple physical sensation and mood, making love surely resembles having an epileptic fit at least as much as, if not more than, it does eating a meal or conversing with someone. ~Susan Sontag - Sexuality
Victims suggest innocence. And innocence, by the inexorable logic that governs all relational terms, suggests guilt. ~Susan Sontag - Victims
The writer is either a practicing recluse or a delinquent, guilt-ridden one; or both. Usually both. ~Susan Sontag - Writers and Writing
Though collecting quotations could be considered as merely an ironic mimetism -- victimless collecting, as it were... in a world that is well on its way to becoming one vast quarry, the collector becomes someone engaged in a pious work of salvage. The course of modern history having already sapped the traditions and shattered the living wholes in which precious objects once found their place, the collector may now in good conscience go about excavating the choicer, more emblematic fragments. ~Susan Sontag - Quotations
Existence is no more than the precarious attainment of relevance in an intensely mobile flux of past, present, and future. ~Susan Sontag - Existence
The love of the famous, like all strong passions, is quite abstract. Its intensity can be measured mathematically, and it is independent of persons. ~Susan Sontag - Fame
For those who live neither with religious consolations about death nor with a sense of death (or of anything else) as natural, death is the obscene mystery, the ultimate affront, the thing that cannot be controlled. It can only be denied. ~Susan Sontag - Death and Dying
With the modern diseases (once TB, now cancer) the romantic idea that the disease expresses the character is invariably extended to assert that the character causes the disease -- because it has not expressed itself. Passion moves inward, striking and blighting the deepest cellular recesses. ~Susan Sontag - Disease
Boredom is just the reverse side of fascination: both depend on being outside rather than inside a situation, and one leads to the other. ~Susan Sontag - Bores and Boredom
Ours is a culture based on excess, on overproduction; the result is a steady loss of sharpness in our sensory experience. All the conditions of modern life -- its material plenitude, its sheer crowdedness -- conjoin to dull our sensory faculties. ~Susan Sontag - Excess
Al forms of consensus about ''great'' books and ''perennial'' problems, once stabilized, tend to deteriorate eventually into something philistine. The real life of the mind is always at the frontiers of ''what is already known.'' Those great books don't only need custodians and transmitters. To stay alive, they also need adversaries. The most interesting ideas are heresies. ~Susan Sontag - Political Correctness
Any important disease whose causality is murky, and for which treatment is ineffectual, tends to be awash in significance. ~Susan Sontag - Disease
The ideology of capitalism makes us all into connoisseurs of liberty -- of the indefinite expansion of possibility. ~Susan Sontag - Capitalism
The becoming of man is the history of the exhaustion of his possibilities. ~Susan Sontag - Possibilities
Anything in history or nature that can be described as changing steadily can be seen as heading toward catastrophe. ~Susan Sontag - Change
It is not altogether wrong to say that there is no such thing as a bad photograph -- only less interesting, less relevant, less mysterious ones. ~Susan Sontag - Photography
Using a camera appeases the anxiety which the work-driven feel about not working when they are on vacation and supposed to be having fun. They have something to do that is like a friendly imitation of work: they can take pictures. ~Susan Sontag - Travel and Tourism
Depression is melancholy minus its charms -- the animation, the fits. ~Susan Sontag - Depression
Guns have metamorphosed into cameras in this earnest comedy, the ecology safari, because nature has ceased to be what it always had been -- what people needed protection from. Now nature tamed, endangered, mortal -- needs to be protected from people. ~Susan Sontag - Ecology
Industrial societies turn their citizens into image-junkies; it is the most irresistible form of mental pollution. Poignant longings for beauty, for an end to probing below the surface, for a redemption and celebration of the body of the world. Ultimately, having an experience becomes identical with taking a photograph of it. ~Susan Sontag - Image
A fiction about soft or easy deaths is part of the mythology of most diseases that are not considered shameful or demeaning. ~Susan Sontag - Death and Dying
Taste has no system and no proofs. ~Susan Sontag - Taste
It is not suffering as such that is most deeply feared but suffering that degrades. ~Susan Sontag - Suffering
The painter constructs, the photographer discloses. ~Susan Sontag - Photography
It's a pleasure to share one's memories. Everything remembered is dear, endearing, touching, precious. At least the past is safe --though we didn't know it at the time. We know it now. Because it's in the past; because we have survived. ~Susan Sontag - Memory
Ambition if it feeds at all, does so on the ambition of others. ~Susan Sontag - Ambition
Science fiction films are not about science. They are about disaster, which is one of the oldest subjects of art. ~Susan Sontag - Science Fiction
The past itself, as historical change continues to accelerate, has become the most surreal of subjects --making it possible... to see a new beauty in what is vanishing. ~Susan Sontag - Past
R eligion is probably, after sex, the second oldest resource which human beings have available to them for blowing their minds. ~Susan Sontag - Religion
Camp is a vision of the world in terms of style -- but a particular kind of style. It is love of the exaggerated. ~Susan Sontag - Exaggeration
Unfortunately, moral beauty in art -- like physical beauty in a person -- is extremely perishable. It is nowhere so durable as artistic or intellectual beauty. Moral beauty has a tendency to decay very rapidly into sententiousness or untimeliness. ~Susan Sontag - Morality
The discovery of the good taste of bad taste can be very liberating. The man who insists on high and serious pleasures is depriving himself of pleasure; he continually restricts what he can enjoy; in the constant exercise of his good taste he will eventually price himself out of the market, so to speak. Here Camp taste supervenes upon good taste as a daring and witty hedonism. It makes the man of good taste cheerful, where before he ran the risk of being chronically frustrated. It is good for the digestion. ~Susan Sontag - Taste
In the final analysis, ''style'' is art. And art is nothing more or less than various modes of stylized, dehumanized representation. ~Susan Sontag - Style

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