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This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

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Showing results by Susan Sontag only

But the disenchantment of American intellectuals with psychoanalytic ideas, as with the earlier disenchantment with Marxist ideas (a parallel case), is premature. Marxism is not Stalinism or the suppression of the Hungarian revolution; pschoanalysis is not the Park Avenue analyst or the psychoanalytic journals or the suburban matron discussing her child's Oedipus complex. Disenchantment is the characteristic posture of contemporary American intellectuals, but disenchantment is often the product of laziness. We are not tenacious enough about ideas, as we have not been serious or honest enough about sexuality.

—p.258 Psychoanalysis and Norman O. Brown's Life Against Death (256) by Susan Sontag 6 years, 7 months ago

Of course I thought I was Jo in Little Women. But I didn’t want to write what Jo wrote. Then in Martin Eden I found a writer-protagonist with whose writing I could identify, so then I wanted to be Martin Eden—minus, of course, the dreary fate Jack London gives him. I saw myself as (I guess I was) a heroic autodidact. I looked forward to the struggle of the writing life. I thought of being a writer as a heroic vocation.

[...]

Later, when I was thirteen, I read the journals of André Gide, which described a life of great privilege and relentless avidity.

asked about role models

—p.182 The Art of Fiction No. 143 (176) by Susan Sontag 9 months, 1 week ago

Reading—which is rarely related to what I’m writing, or hoping to write. I read a lot of art history, architectural history, musicology, academic books on many subjects. And poetry. Getting started is partly stalling, stalling by way of reading and of listening to music, which energizes me and also makes me restless. Feeling guilty about not writing.

[...]

I write in spurts. I write when I have to because the pressure builds up and I feel enough confidence that something has matured in my head and I can write it down. But once something is really under way, I don’t want to do anything else. I don’t go out, much of the time I forget to eat, I sleep very little. It’s a very undisciplined way of working and makes me not very prolific. But I’m too interested in many other things.

when asked what helps her get started, and if she writes every day

—p.188 The Art of Fiction No. 143 (176) by Susan Sontag 9 months, 1 week ago

Well, it does educate us about life. I wouldn’t be the person I am, I wouldn’t understand what I understand, were it not for certain books. I’m thinking of the great question of nineteenth-century Russian literature: how should one live? A novel worth reading is an education of the heart. It enlarges your sense of human possibility, of what human nature is, of what happens in the world. It’s a creator of inwardness.

whether the purpose of literature is to educate us about life

—p.193 The Art of Fiction No. 143 (176) by Susan Sontag 9 months, 1 week ago

Whenever I avow to being influenced, I’m never sure I’m telling the truth. But here goes. I think I learned a lot about punctuation and speed from Donald Barthelme, about adjectives and sentence rhythms from Elizabeth Hardwick. I don’t know if I learned from Nabokov and Thomas Bernhard, but their incomparable books help me keep my standards for myself as severe as they ought to be. And Godard—Godard has been a major nourishment to my sensibility and therefore, inevitably, to my writing. And I’ve certainly learned something as a writer from the way Schnabel plays Beethoven, Glenn Gould plays Bach, and Mitsuko Uchida plays Mozart.

—p.197 The Art of Fiction No. 143 (176) by Susan Sontag 9 months, 1 week ago

Don’t dare. Don’t want to. But, anyway, I don’t write because there’s an audience. I write because there is literature.

whether she thinks about her audience

—p.208 The Art of Fiction No. 143 (176) by Susan Sontag 9 months, 1 week ago

Showing results by Susan Sontag only