Alfred Kazin
Critic
1915-06-05 – 1998-06-05
Alfred Kazin was an American writer and literary critic whose essays and reviews appeared in leading U.S. publications. He is especially known for memoirs and criticism focused on American and immigrant literary experience. He was born on June 5, 1915, and died on June 5, 1998.
Quotes by Alfred Kazin
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The writer writes in order to teach himself, to understand himself, to satisfy himself; the publishing of his ideas, though it brings gratification, is a curious anticlimax.
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One writes to make a home for oneself, on paper, in time and in others' minds.
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The writer writes in order to teach himself, to understand himself, to satisfy himself; the publishing of his ideas, though it brings gratification, is a curious anticlimax.
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One writes to make a home for oneself, on paper, in time and in others' minds.
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Art changes all the time, but it never improves. It may go down, or up, but it never improves as technology and medicine improve.
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What need had the businessman to scribble or philosophize when he dominated the imagination of his time and the frantic materialism that was his principle of existence had become the haunting central figure in contemporary life?
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A year after Hemingway died on the front page, Faulkner went off after a binge, as if dying was nobody's business but his own.
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Modern American literature was born in protest, born in rebellion, born out of the sense of loss and indirection which was imposed upon the new generations out of the realization that the old formal culture-the New England idea-could no longer serve.
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Is it strange, then, that in a literature so concerned with realism and with personal liberation this refusal and impoverishment of the life of the spirit have always nourished the screamers, the eccentrics, the pseudo-Whitmans, the calculating terrorists?
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The conviction of tragedy that rises out of his [John Dos Passos's] work is the steady protest of a sensitive democratic conscience against the tyranny and the ugliness of society, against the failure of a complete human development under industrial capitalism.
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What happens whenever we convert a writer into a symbol is that we lose the writer himself in all his indefeasible singularity, his particular inimitable genius.
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We never know how much has been missing from our lives until a true writer comes along.
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