“It is now life and not art that requires the willing suspension of disbelief.”
Lionel Trilling (1905–1975) American academic
"The Novel Alive or Dead," A Gathering of Fugitives: New Essays (1956)
Source: Biographia Literaria (1817), Ch. XIV
“It is now life and not art that requires the willing suspension of disbelief.”
Lionel Trilling (1905–1975) American academic
"The Novel Alive or Dead," A Gathering of Fugitives: New Essays (1956)
Lewis H. Lapham (1935) American journalist
Source: Money And Class In America (1989), Chapter 8, Holy Dread, p. 197-198
“Disbelief is more resistant than faith because it is sustained by the senses.”
Gabriel García Márquez book Of Love and Other Demons
Source: Of Love and Other Demons
“The moment disbelief arises, the spell is broken; the magic, or rather art, has failed.”
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien book On Fairy-Stories
On Fairy-Stories (1939)
Context: The story-maker proves a successful 'sub-creator'. He makes a Secondary World which your mind can enter. Inside it, what he relates is 'true': it accords with the laws of that world. You therefore believe it, while you are, as it were, inside. The moment disbelief arises, the spell is broken; the magic, or rather art, has failed.
Wallace Stevens (1879–1955) American poet
The Necessary Angel (1951), Imagination as Value
Context: What the poet has in mind... is that poetic value is an intrinsic value. It is not the value of knowledge. It is not the value of faith. It is the value of imagination. The poet tries to exemplify it, in part as I have tried to exemplify it here, by identifying it with an imaginative activity that diffuses itself throughout our lives.
Diogenes Laërtius (180–240) biographer of ancient Greek philosophers
Pyrrho, 11.
The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers (c. 200 A.D.), Book 9: Uncategorized philosophers and Skeptics