Susan Sontag Quotes

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Anything in history or nature that can be described as changing steadily can be seen as heading toward catastrophe.

By Susan Sontag
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...

By Susan Sontag
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 ob...

By Susan Sontag
A fiction about soft or easy deaths ... is part of the mythology of most diseases that are not considered shameful or demeaning.

By Susan Sontag
... liberal intellectuals ... tend to have a classical theory of politics, in which the state has a monopoly of power; hoping that those in po...

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
The truth is balance. However the opposite of truth, which is unbalance, may not be a lie.

By Susan Sontag
Religion is probably, after sex, the second oldest resource which human beings have available to them for blowing their minds.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
The becoming of man is the history of the exhaustion of his possibilities.

By Susan Sontag
The painter constructs, the photographer discloses.

By Susan Sontag
In America, the photographer is not simply the person who records the past, but the one who invents it.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
Nature in America has always been suspect, on the defensive, cannibalized by progress. In America, every specimen becomes a relic.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
Most men experience getting older with regret, apprehension. But most women experience it even more painfully: with shame. Aging is a man's destiny, something that must happen because he is a human being.

By Susan Sontag
Intelligence is really a kind of taste: taste in ideas.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
Victims suggest innocence. And innocence, by the inexorable logic that governs all relational terms, suggests guilt.

By Susan Sontag
In good films, there is always a directness that entirely frees us from the itch to interpret.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
A family's photograph album is generally about the extended family and, often, is all that remains of it.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
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.

By Susan Sontag
Ambition if it feeds at all, does so on the ambition of others.

By Susan Sontag
What is most beautiful in virile men is something feminine what is most beautiful in feminine women is something masculine.

By Susan Sontag