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Jose Saramago [1922-2010] Portuguese
Rank: 102
Writer


José de Sousa Saramago, GColSE, was a Portuguese writer and recipient of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Literature. His works, some of which can be seen as allegories, commonly present subversive perspectives on historic events, emphasizing the human factor. 

Positive, Space, Attitude, Death, Government, Home, Legal, Poetry, Travel



QuoteTagsRank
It is difficult to understand these people who democratically take part in elections and a referendum, but are then incapable of democratically accepting the will of the people.
101
Things will be very bad for Latin America. You only have to consider the ambitions and the doctrines of the empire, which regards this region as its backyard.
102
The world is governed by institutions that are not democratic - the World Bank, the IMF, the WTO.
103
Abstention means you stayed at home or went to the beach. By casting a blank vote, you're saying you have a political conscience but you don't agree with any of the existing parties. Home
104
I think we are blind. Blind people who can see, but do not see.
105
Human vocabulary is still not capable, and probably never will be, of knowing, recognizing, and communicating everything that can be humanly experienced and felt.
106
A human being is a being who is constantly 'under construction,' but also, in a parallel fashion, always in a state of constant destruction.
107
Death is present every day in our lives. It's not that I take pleasure in the morbid fascination of it, but it is a fact of life. Death
108
What kind of world is this that can send machines to Mars and does nothing to stop the killing of a human being?
109
The novel is not so much a literary genre, but a literary space, like a sea that is filled by many rivers. Space
110
People live with the illusion that we have a democratic system, but it's only the outward form of one. In reality we live in a plutocracy, a government of the rich. Government
111
The wisest man I ever knew in my whole life could not read or write.
112
There are plenty of reasons not to put up with the world as it is.
113
Words were not given to man in order to conceal his thoughts.
114
We're not short of movements proclaiming that a different world is possible, but unless we can coordinate them into an international movement, capitalism just laughs at all these little organisations.
115
It is economic power that determines political power, and governments become the political functionaries of economic power.
116
I am the same person I was before receiving the Nobel Prize. I work with the same regularity, I have not modified my habits, I have the same friends.
117
As citizens, we all have an obligation to intervene and become involved - it's the citizen who changes things.
118
Inside us there is something that has no name, that something is what we are.
119
There are times when it is best to be content with what one has, so as not to lose everything.
120
Being fired was the best luck of my life. It made me stop and reflect. It was the birth of my life as a writer.
121
I believe myself to be the type of person who does not complicate his life. I have always lived my life without dramatizing things, whether the good things that have happened to me or the bad. I simply live those moments.
122
The attitude of insolent haughtiness is characteristic of the relationships Americans form with what is alien to them, with others. Attitude
123
In effect I am not a novelist, but rather a failed essayist who started to write novels because he didn't know how to write essays.
124
I never appreciated 'positive heroes' in literature. They are almost always cliches, copies of copies, until the model is exhausted. I prefer perplexity, doubt, uncertainty, not just because it provides a more 'productive' literary raw material, but because that is the way we humans really are. Positive
125
Beginning with adolescence, my political formation was oriented in the ideological direction of Marxism. It was natural, being that my thinking was influenced by an atmosphere of active critical resistance. That was the way it was during all of the dictatorship and up to the Revolution of 1974.
126
I think the novel is not so much a literary genre, but a literary space, like a sea that is filled by many rivers. The novel receives streams of science, philosophy, poetry and contains all of these; it's not simply telling a story. Poetry, Space
201
Society has to change, but the political powers we have at the moment are not enough to effect this change. The whole democratic system would have to be rethought.
202
I am traveling less in order to be able to write more. I select my travel destinations according to their degree of usefulness to my work. Travel
203
I am a person with leftist convictions, and always have been.
204
I always ask two questions: How many countries have military bases in the United States? And in how many countries does the United States not have military bases?
205
In the end we discover the only condition for living is to die.
206
I presume that nobody will deny the positive aspects of the North American cultural world. These are well known to all. But these aspects do not make one forget the disastrous effects of the industrial and commercial process of 'cultural lamination' that the USA is perpetrating on the planet. Positive
207
I was a good pupil at primary school: in the second class I was writing with no spelling mistakes, and the third and fourth classes were done in a single year.
208
For me, writing is a job. I do not separate the work from the act of writing like two things that have nothing to do with each other. I arrange words one after another, or one in front of another, to tell a story, to say something that I consider important or useful, or at least important or useful to me.
209
In the end, I am quite normal. I don't have odd habits. I don't dramatize. Above all, I do not romanticize the act of writing. I don't talk about the anguish I suffer in creating. I do not have a fear of the blank page, writer's block, all those things that we hear about writers.
210
The painter paints, the musician makes music, the novelist writes novels. But I believe that we all have some influence, not because of the fact that one is an artist, but because we are citizens.
211
I can't imagine myself outside any kind of social or political involvement. Yes, I'm a writer, but I live in this world, and my writing doesn't exist on a separate level. And if people know who I am and read my books, well, good; that way, if I have something more to say, then everyone benefits.
212
Without the faintest possibility of finding a job, I decided to devote myself to literature: it was about time to find out what I was worth as a writer.
213
The world had already changed before September 11. The world has been going through a process of change over the last 20 or 30 years. A civilization ends, another one begins.
214
I had no books at home. I started to frequent a public library in Lisbon. It was there, with no help except curiosity and the will to learn, that my taste for reading developed and was refined.
215
I do not just write, I write what I am. If there is a secret, perhaps that is it.
216
I am not a prophet.
217
I am a better novelist than a poet, playwright, or essayist.
218
Can you imagine what Bush would say if someone like Hugo Chavez asked him for a little piece of land to install a military base, and he only wanted to plant a Venezuelan flag there?
219
Americans have discovered the fragility of life, that ominous fragility that the rest of the world either already experienced or is experiencing now with terrible intensity.
220
Americans have discovered fear.
221
Though I had come into the world on 16 November 1922, my official documents show that I was born two days later, on the 18th. It was thanks to this petty fraud that my family escaped from paying the fine for not having registered my birth at the proper legal time. Legal
222
To continue living, we have to die. That's the story of humanity - generation after generation - that we are going to die. There's nothing dramatic about death except that one loses one's life.
223
I don't defend the idea of universal love. It has never existed and will never exist.
224
A writer's definitive death is when no one reads his books anymore. That's the final death.
225
The U.S. needs to control the Middle East, the gateway to Asia. It already has military installations in Uzbekistan.
226
The problem is that the right doesn't need any ideas to govern, but the left can't govern without ideas.
301
Look what happened with the employment law in France-the law was withdrawn because the people marched in the streets. I think what we need is a global protest movement of people who won't give up.
302
I can't imagine myself outside any kind of social or political involvement.
303
Perhaps it is the language that chooses the writers it needs, making use of them so that each might express a tiny part of what it is.
304
The period that I could consider the most important in my literary work came about beginning with the Revolution, and in a certain way, developed as a consequence of the Revolution. But it was also a result of the counterrevolutionary coup of November 1975.
305
I was born in a family of landless peasants, in Azinhaga, a small village in the province of Ribatejo, on the right bank of the Almonda River, around a hundred kilometres north-east of Lisbon.
306
At the end of the 1950s, I started working at a publishing company, Estudios Cor, as production manager, so returning, but not as an author, to the world of letters I had left some years before.
307
When I am occupied with a work that requires continuity - a novel, for example - I write every day.
308

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