Date: 1957
"This direction, of course, is towards the delineation of the domestic life and the private experience of the characters who belong to it: the two go together--we get inside their minds as well as inside their houses."
preview | full record— Watt, Ian (1917-1999)
Date: 1959
Dostoevsky advances "in the labyrinth of the unnatural, into the cellarage and morass of the soul."
preview | full record— Steiner, George (b. 1929)
Date: 1959
"Look, the fixed stars, all just alike / as lack-land atoms split apart, / and the Republic summons Ike, / the mausoleum in her heart."
preview | full record— Lowell, Robert (1917-1977)
Date: 1959
"And I believe in the spurred flame, / Those racing tongues, but cannot come / Out of my heart's unbroken room."
preview | full record— Hill, Geoffrey (b. 1932)
Date: 1961
"A highly symbolic position, which will doubtless remain his until our own day, if we are wililng to admit that what was formerly a visible fortress of order has now become a castle of conscience."
preview | full record— Foucault, Michel (1926-1984)
Date: 1962
"And let me add here how much I was honored a fortnight later to meet in Washington that limp-looking, absent-minded, shabbily dressed splendid American gentleman whose mind was a library and not a debating hall."
preview | full record— Nabokov, Vladimir (1899-1977)
Date: July, 1962; November 22, 1962; 1973
"Some of my characters are, no doubt, pretty beastly, but I really don't care, they are outside my inner self like the mournful monsters of a cathedral façade--demons placed there merely to show that they have been booted out."
preview | full record— Nabokov, Vladimir (1899-1977)
Date: 1964
"Its productivity and efficiency, its capacity to increase and spread comforts, to turn waste into need, and destruction into construction, the extent to which this civilization transforms the object world into an extension of man's mind and body makes the very notion of alienation questionable. ...
preview | full record— Marcuse, Herbert (1898-1979)
Date: 1968
"There is a little man who lives in one's head. The little man keeps a library."
preview | full record— Fodor, Jerry (b. 1935)
Date: 1968
"This is, I think, perfectly correct. The little man [in one's head], as we might say, has in his library pamphlets entitled 'Tying One's Shoes', 'Speaking Latin', and 'Typing 'Afghanistan"', but no pamphlet entitled 'Being Intelligent' or 'Speaking Latin Fluently' or 'Typing "Afghanistan" with P...
preview | full record— Fodor, Jerry (b. 1935)