
“Liz, you must be very polite with yourself when you are learning something new.”
Source: Eat, Pray, Love
Source: Sex, Art and American Culture : New Essays (1992), Junk Bonds and Corporate Raiders : Academe in the Hour of the Wolf, p. 223
“Liz, you must be very polite with yourself when you are learning something new.”
Source: Eat, Pray, Love
Non-Fiction, English Literature: A Survey for Students (1958, revised 1974)
Open letter to Dr. Gustáv Husák, Communist President (8 April 1975)
Context: Life cannot be destroyed for good, neither … can history be brought entirely to a halt. A secret streamlet trickles on beneath the heavy lid of inertia and pseudo-events, slowly and inconspicuously undercutting it. It may be a long process, but one day it must happen: the lid will no longer hold and will start to crack. This is the moment when something once more begins visibly to happen, something truly new and unique … something truly historical, in the sense that history again demands to be heard.
Source: 1880s, "The Study of Administration," 1887, p. 203; as cited in: Dimock (1937;28)
Preface
A Course of Lectures on Natural Philosophy and the Mechanical Arts (1807)
Listen, Little Man! (1948)
Context: They call you "Little Man", "Common Man"; they say a new era has begun, the "Era of the Common Man". It isn't you who says so, Little Man. It is they, the Vice Presidents of great nations, promoted labour leaders, repentant sons of bourgeois families, statesman and philosophers. They give you your future but don't ask about your past.
Steven Nadler, A Book Forged in Hell: Spinoza's Scandalous Treatise and the Birth of the Secular Age (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2011)
M - R, Steven Nadler
What is to be Done? (1902)
Source: The transformation of American industrial relations, 1986, p. 45