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David Lodge Quotes

English author and critic, Birth: 28-1-1935 David Lodge Quotes
1.
whhheeeEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE! The scream of jet engines rises to a crescendo on the runways of the world. Every second, somewhere or other, a plane touches down, with a puff of smoke from scorched tyre rubber, or rises in the air, leaving a smear of black fumes dissolving in its wake. From space, the earth might look to a fanciful eye like a huge carousel, with planes instead of horses spinning round its circumference, up and down, up and down. Whhheeeeeeeeeee!
David Lodge

2.
to read is to surrender oneself to an endless displacement of curiosity and desire from one sentence to another, from one action to another, from one level of a text to another. The text unveils itself before us, but never allows itself to be possessed; and instead of trying to possess it we should take pleasure in its teasing
David Lodge

3.
Universities are the cathedrals of the modern age. They shouldn't have to justify their existence by utilitarian criteria.
David Lodge

4.
Life, after all, should go forwards, not backwards.
David Lodge

5.
Every decoding is another encoding.
David Lodge

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6.
Information is the religion of the modern world.
David Lodge

7.
Morris read through the letter. Was it a shade too fulsome? No, that was another law of academic life: it is impossible to be excessive in flattery of one's peers.
David Lodge

8.
I'm a bit of a deconstructionist myself. It's kind of exciting - the last intellectual thrill left. Like sawing through the branch you're sitting on.
David Lodge

Quote Topics by David Lodge: Desire Modern Curiosity World Age Sex Epidemics Fall Real Lyric Poetry Intellectual Communication Literature Information Play Sleep Dying Academic Life Cutting Men Law Names Should These Days Horse Walt Faces Habit Ends Perfect
9.
Language is the net that holds thought trapped within a particular culture. But if one could only strike the ball with sufficient force, with perfect timing, it would perhaps break through the netting, continue on its course, never fall to earth, but go into orbit around the world.
David Lodge

10.
It's the only thing that keeps me going these days, travelling. Changes of scene, changes of faces
David Lodge

11.
To read is to surrender oneself to an endless displacement of curiosity and desire from one sentence to another
David Lodge

12.
Paraphrase, in the sense of summary, is as indispensable to the novel-critic as close analysis is to the critic of lyric poetry. The natural deduction is that novels are paraphrasable whereas poems are not. But this is a false deduction because close analysis is itself a disguised form of paraphrase.
David Lodge

13.
I respect a man who can recognize a quotation. It's a dying art.
David Lodge

14.
I never did like working out - it bears the same relationship to real sport as masturbation does to real sex
David Lodge

15.
Perhaps that's what we're all looking for - desire undiluted by habit.
David Lodge

16.
That's the attraction of the conference circuit: it's a way of converting work into play, combining professionalism with tourism, and all at someone else's expense. Write a paper and see the world! I'm Jane Austen - fly me!
David Lodge

17.
Any language is necessarily a finite system applied with different degrees of creativity to an infinite variety of situations, and most of the words and phrases we use are "prefabricated" in the sense that we don't coin new ones every time we speak.
David Lodge

18.
Four times, under our educational rules, the human pack is shuffled and cut - at eleven-plus, sixteen-plus, eighteen-plus and twenty-plus - and happy is he who comes top of the deck on each occasion, but especially the last. This is called Finals, the very name of which implies that nothing of importance can happen after it.
David Lodge

19.
It was Adam Appleby's misfortune that at the moment of awakening from sleep his consciousness was immediately flooded with everything he least wanted to think about
David Lodge

20.
Jogging, I believe they call it. It seems to be an epidemic psychological illness afflicting Americans these days. A form of masochism, like the flagellantes in the Middle Ages.
David Lodge

21.
Walt Whitman, he who laid end to end words never seen in each other's company before outside of a dictionary.
David Lodge