1990s, The Monarchy: A Critique of Britain's Favourite Fetish
“In their last ditch, the royalists object that this all too bloodless and practical; that people need and want the element of magic and fantasy. Nobody wants life to be charmless. But the element of fantasy and magic is as primitive as it is authentic, and there are good reasons why it should not come from the state.”
When orchestrated and distributed in that way, it leads to disappointment and rancour, and can lead to the enthronement of sillier or nastier idols.
1990s, The Monarchy: A Critique of Britain's Favourite Fetish
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Christopher Hitchens 305
British American author and journalist 1949–2011Related quotes
As quoted in "Salman Rushdie talks with Terry Gilliam", in The Believer (March 2003) http://www.believermag.com/issues/200303/?read=interview_gilliam
Context: Well, I really want to encourage a kind of fantasy, a kind of magic. I love the term magic realism, whoever invented it — I do actually like it because it says certain things. It's about expanding how you see the world. I think we live in an age where we're just hammered, hammered to think this is what the world is. Television's saying, everything's saying "That's the world." And it's not the world. The world is a million possible things.
“Is this the life you really want? Or is it just the fantasy of it?”
Source: Love Bites
Sometimes a Fantasy.
Song lyrics, Glass Houses (1980)
“What people really want in the theater is fantasy involvement and not reality involvement.”
Quote (4 June 1967)
“… fantasy is not practice for what is real—fantasy is the opiate of women.”
Source: Austenland
"Quotes", The Educated Imagination (1963), Talk 2: The Singing School
Source: 1930s, "Empirical Sociology" (1931), p. 322