Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
The sun does what it does because the earth tilts.
Vijay Seshadri
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Vijay Seshadri
Age: 70
Born: 1954
Born: February 13
Poet
Writer
Namma Bengaluru
Earth
Tilts
Tilt
Sun
Doe
More quotes by Vijay Seshadri
I could say that in the essay, as it has developed historically, success is determined by the writer's ability to express, through an individual voice, a collective experience - you are speaking individually but you are representing collectively.
Vijay Seshadri
It's important for all writers to try to figure out what they're doing.
Vijay Seshadri
We all think of ourselves as our subjectivity, our consciousness.
Vijay Seshadri
Technology is transforming everything. Who knows what it's doing, we don't really understand it.
Vijay Seshadri
I think that when you reveal things that are going to cause pain, you have rhetorical resources in poetry.
Vijay Seshadri
We live in a trans period. Contemporary issues of sexuality, for example - the exciting aspects of them - have to do with transgenderedness. And there's trans-nationality. There are people like me, for example. I mean, what am I? Am I Indian? Am I American? And I'm not alone in being between things.
Vijay Seshadri
Society imposes an identity on you because of the way you look. Your struggle as a self has to do with an identity being imposed on you that you know is not your identity.
Vijay Seshadri
Orwell says somewhere that no one ever writes the real story of their life. The real story of a life is the story of its humiliations.
Vijay Seshadri
Genres have a history and impose a historical character upon the writer. What is interesting in the poem involves a certain kind of dramatization of the self that you don't have to engage in in the essay. In fact, the essay is a more social medium than the poem.
Vijay Seshadri
These new theories of the universe, that there are multiple universes just bubbling up constantly - it's all pretty wild.
Vijay Seshadri
I see myself only sporadically as a teacher and consistently as a writer. Teaching is how I pay the bills...and fortunately, for my students, I can intellectualize about writing, and I can talk about it well, and I like to talk about it.
Vijay Seshadri
You probably have to split yourself in various ways just in order to survive, and to think of yourself as a multitude.
Vijay Seshadri
All ideas about identity, of course, fit perfectly into the social media wonderland we live in. They seem to really connect. There's a science-fiction aspect to our contemporary life. What's virtual, what's real.
Vijay Seshadri
Historically, there are hierarchies of purity. Certain aspects of poetry are very, very pure. The lyric poem can't be anything but the lyric poem.
Vijay Seshadri
You don't think of yourself as your external representation, or even your national origin or anything like that. You don't reduce yourself to that. That's kind of unthinkable.
Vijay Seshadri
I was always a reader. In the fifth grade, I got some sort of prize for having read hundreds of books from the library.
Vijay Seshadri
I resist thinking of myself as a teacher. I think of myself as a writer who has pulled a fast one and hoodwinked this institution into giving me a job and health insurance.
Vijay Seshadri
I would say that when I write prose I'm a more socially responsible person. I'm much more a citizen of the world. But the instability of the poetry, the emotional jaggedness, is also me.
Vijay Seshadri
Language itself is a mask. It's the first mask in the series of invented selves - they've come right out of language. The way you speak changes you, because when you are speaking, you are representing yourself in a certain way.
Vijay Seshadri