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Quotes about Culture

Properly speaking, a culture does not have a tradition; it is a tradition.
- James Carse
Nature is the realm of the unspeakable. It has no voice of its own, and nothing to say. We experience the unspeakability of nature as its utter indifference to human culture.
- James Carse
A culture can be no stronger than its strongest myths.
- James Carse
Any attempt to vary from the past in such a way as to cut the past off, causing it to be forgotten, has little cultural importance.
- James Carse
The paradox in our relation to nature is that the more deeply a culture respects the indifference of nature, the more creatively it will call upon its own spontaneity in response. The more clearly we remind ourselves that we can have no unnatural influence on nature, the more our culture will embody a freedom to embrace surprise and unpredictability.
- James Carse
So also in culture. Infinite players understand that the vigor of a culture has to do with the variety of its sources, the differences within itself. The unique and the surprising are not suppressed in some persons for the strength of others. The genius in you stimulates the genius in me.
- James Carse
Since culture is horizonal it is not restricted by time or space.
- James Carse
Since a culture is not anything persons do, but anything they do with each other, we may say that a culture comes into being whenever persons choose to be a people. It is as a people that they arrange their rules with each other, their moralities, their modes of communication.
- James Carse
Deviancy, however, is the very essence of culture. Whoever merely follows the script, merely repeating the past, is culturally impoverished.
- James Carse
Cultural deviation does not return us to the past, but continues what was begun and not finished in the past.
- James Carse
Learning and literature have a way of outlasting the civilisation that made them.
- Dorothy Sayers
From time to time complaints are made about the ringing of church bells. It seems strange that a generation which tolerates the uproar of the internal combustion engine and the wailing of the jazz band should be so sensitive to the one loud noise that is made to the glory of God. England, alone in the world
- Dorothy Sayers