“… we live in an era of terrible preoccupation with presentation and interpretation, one in which relations between who someone is and what he believes and how he "expresses himself" have been thrown into big time flux.”
Source: Consider the Lobster and Other Essays
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David Foster Wallace185
American fiction writer and essayist 1962–2008Related quotes
Freda Adler (1934) Criminologist, educator
Source: Sisters in Crime: The Rise of the New Female Criminal (1975), P. 31.
Joseph Stalin (1879–1953) General secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
Moskovskie novosti, no. 32, 7 August 1988
Contemporary witnesses
Joan of Arc (1412–1431) French folk heroine and Roman Catholic saint
Quote is often seen as attributed to Joan of Arc. However, the quote is actually a line from a script for the 1946 Broadway play entitled Joan of Lorraine by Maxwell Anderson which later become a movie in 1948 entitled Joan of Arc directed by Victor Fleming and starring Ingrid Bergman. The line is spoken by Joan of Arc to Bishop Pierre Cauchon in Act II, Scene III of the play. ( Script http://books.google.com/books?id=bOe6kHHbSiEC) <br class="br">Misattributed
Willem de Sitter (1872–1934) Dutch cosmologist
Kosmos (1932), Above is Beginning Quote of the Last Chapter: Relativity and Modern Theories of the Universe -->
Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed (1905–1977) the fifth President of India and a politician
Source: Great Muslims of undivided India, P.101
Sigmund Freud (1856–1939) Austrian neurologist known as the founding father of psychoanalysis
"Three Essays On The Theory Of Sexuality" (1905), reprinted in "Essential Papers on Masochism" p.87, edited by Margaret Ann Fitzpatrick Hanly, New York University press, New York and London, (1995)
1900s
Niccolo Machiavelli book The Prince
Original: (it) Molti si sono immaginate Repubbliche e Principati, che non si sono mai visti nè cognosciuti essere in vero; perchè egli è tanto discosto da come si vive, a come si doveria vivere, che colui che lascia quello che si fa per quello che si doveria fare, impara piuttosto la rovina, che la preservazione sua.
Source: The Prince (1513), Ch. 15; translated by W. K. Marriot