Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
The idea of nature contains, though often unnoticed, an extraordinary amount of human history.
Raymond Williams
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Raymond Williams
Age: 66 †
Born: 1921
Born: August 31
Died: 1988
Died: January 26
Literary Critic
Literary Historian
Literary Scholar
Novelist
Philosopher
Professor
Sociologist
Writer
Y Pandy
Raymond Henry Williams
Humans
Amount
Though
Idea
History
Often
Nature
Unnoticed
Ideas
Contains
Human
Extraordinary
More quotes by Raymond Williams
What is often being argued, it seems to me, in the idea of nature is the idea of man and this not only generally, or in ultimate ways, but the idea of man in society, indeed the ideas of kinds of societies.
Raymond Williams
To be truly radical is to make hope possible rather than despair inevitable.
Raymond Williams
Most works of art are effectively treated as commodities and most artists, even when they justly claim quite other intentions, areeffectively treated as a category of independent craftsmen or skilled workers producing a certain kind of marginal commodity.
Raymond Williams
We all like to think of ourselves as a standard, and I can see that it is genuinely difficult for the English middle class to suppose that the working class is not desperately anxious to become just like itself. I am afraid this must be unlearned.
Raymond Williams
Every aspect of personal life is radically affected by the quality of general life, and yet the general life is seen at its most important in completely personal terms.
Raymond Williams
A very large part of English middle-class education is devoted to the training of servants...In so far as it is, by definition, the training of upper servants, it includes, of course, the instilling of that kind of confidence which will enable the upper servants to supervise and direct the lower servants.
Raymond Williams
The human crisis is always a crisis of understanding: what we genuinely understand we can do.
Raymond Williams
It wasn't idealism that made me, from the beginning, want a more secure and rational society. It was an intellectual judgment, to which I still hold. When I was young its name was socialism. We can be deflected by names. But the need was absolute, and is still absolute.
Raymond Williams
The real dividing line between things we call work and the things we call leisure is that in leisure, however active we may be, we make our own choices and our own decisions. We feel for the time being that our life is our own.
Raymond Williams
The gap between our feelings and our social observation is dangerously wide.
Raymond Williams
It is not primarily ideas that have a history it is societies. And then what often seem opposed ideas can in the end be seen as parts of a single social process.
Raymond Williams
Culture is one of the two or three most complicated words in the English language.
Raymond Williams