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“War is sweet to those who have no experience of it. But the experienced man trembles exceedingly in his heart at its approach.”

— Pindar, Share via Whatsapp

“He who has never left his hearth and has confined his researches to the narrow field of the history of his own country cannot be compared to the courageous traveller who has worn out his life in journeys of exploration to distant parts and each day has faced danger in order to persevere in excavating the mines of learning and in snatching precious fragments of the past from oblivion.”

— Al Masudi, From the Meadows of Gold, Share via Whatsapp

“The point of history is not what can be uprooted or shaken, but rather the openness to the shaking.”

— Jan Patočka, Heretical Essays in the Philosophy of History, Share via Whatsapp

“Besides the tablecloths, the decor is all old photographs and postcards that they scrounged up from wherever, because you know how white people love their history right up until it s true.”

— Danielle Evans, The Office of Historical Corrections, Share via Whatsapp

“I know quite well why I became a historian.... It was because dissension was frowned upon when I was a child: Don t argue, Claudia, Claudia, you must not answer back like that. Argument, of course, is the whole point of history. Disagreement; my word against yours; this evidence against that. If there were such a thing as absolute truth the debate would lose its lustre. I, for one, would no longer be interested.”

— Penelope Lively, Moon Tiger, Share via Whatsapp

“When I was an activist in the 1980s, ninety-eight percent of my time was spent stuffing envelopes and writing addresses on them. The remaining two percent was the time we spent figuring out what to put in the envelopes. Today, we get those envelopes and stamps and address books for free. This is so fantastically, hugely different and weird that we haven’t even begun to feel the first tendrils of it.”

— Cory Doctorow, In Real Life, Share via Whatsapp

“No one had asked her to marry him, nor was there someone she wished to wed. Not that she did not enjoy the company of young men; She did. But her sharp tongue sliced through their egos and her intellectual thirst quickly soaked up what drops of knowledge they shed.”

— Janet Wallach, Desert Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Gertrude Bell: Adventurer, Adviser to Kings, Ally of Lawrence of Arabia, Share via Whatsapp

“Alle disse skæbner. Vi er så forgængelige, vi mennesker. Når vi er børn, skuer vi ind i evigheden; når vi ældes, ser vi tilbage og ved at det kun var et fingerknips, et glimt i tiden, at vore dage var som regndråber der falder i havet.”

— Mich Vraa, Faith, Share via Whatsapp

“To be completely ignorant of the collective past seems to me to be another state of amnesia; you would be untethered, adrift in time. Which is why all societies have sought some kind of memory bank, whether by way of folklore, story-telling, recitation of the ancestors--from Homer to Genesis. And why the heritage industry does so well today; most people may not be particularly interested in the narrative of the past, in the detail or the discussion, but they are glad to know that it is there.”

— Penelope Lively, Ammonites and Leaping Fish: A Life in Time, Share via Whatsapp

“El error más grave que han cometido los parias, a lo largo de la historia, ha sido confiar en los hijos de papá.”

— Lorenzo Silva, La niebla y la doncella, Share via Whatsapp

“To articulate what is past does not mean to recognize “how it really was.” It means to take control of a memory, as it flashes in a moment of danger.”

— Walter Benjamin, Share via Whatsapp

“History hurt more than any weapon inflicted on us. It hit back harder than any weapon we could wield, any weapon we could turn ourselves into.”

— Saeed Jones, How We Fight For Our Lives, Share via Whatsapp

“I have to sonorously remind those critics that The Lord of the Rings is the historiography of the victors, who have a clear interest in presenting the vanquished in a certain way. Had genocide taken place back then (where did those peoples vanish if it hadn’t?), then it’s doubly important to convince everybody, including oneself, that those had been orcs and trolls rather than people. Or I could ask them: how often do we find in human history rulers that would relinquish their power, for free, to some nobody from nowhere (pardon me – a Dúnadan from the North)? Yet another subject of immodest curiosity might be the actual payment Elessar Elfstone had to make to the wonderful companions he had acquired on the Paths of the Dead. I mean, summoning the powers of Absolute Evil (for a noble cause, of course) is totally commonplace, he’s neither the first nor the last; but for those powers to meekly revert back to nothingness after doing their job without asking anything in return sounds highly doubtful.”

— Kirill Yeskov, The Last Ringbearer, Share via Whatsapp

“Modern history, like a deaf man, answers questions no one has asked.”

— Leo Tolstoy, War and Peace, Share via Whatsapp

“... seria praticamente impossível reconstruir a história de todo aquele período, dizer quem lutava contra quem neste ou naquele dado momento, pois não havia registros escritos e os relatos orais jamais se referiam a algum quadro político diferente do vigente.”

— George Orwell, 1984: A Dystopian Classic Novel, Share via Whatsapp

“Love. This was the way not to fall into forgetting. Love, and a good publicist.”

— Jonathan Lee, The Great Mistake, Share via Whatsapp

“I was born on the day the music died.”

— Harry F. MacDonald, Magic Alex and the Secret History of Rock and Roll, Share via Whatsapp