Ana Castillo Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Ana Castillo's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Novelist Ana Castillo's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 42 quotes on this page collected since June 15, 1953! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • Paris, true to its promise, had been a place of civilized indecencies, or uncivil decencies.

    Ana Castillo (1994). “Sapogonia: An Anti-romance in 3/8 Meter”, Anchor Books
  • People like to think of themselves as purists, but there is no such thing as purity, when there exists so much contact.

    Source: www.english.illinois.edu
  • For things to have value in man's world, they are given the role of commodities. Among man's oldest and most constant commodity is woman.

    Men   Roles   World  
    Ana Castillo (1995). “Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma”, Plume Books
  • There’s something insupportable about being pissed with the one person on this planet that sends your adrenaline flowing to remind you that you’re alive. It’s almost like we’re mad because we’ve been shocked out of our usual comatose state of being by feeling something for someone, for ourselves, for just a moment.

    Mad   Feelings   Usual  
    Ana Castillo (2008). “Loverboys”, p.22, W. W. Norton & Company
  • We live in a polarized world of contrived dualisms, dichotomies and paradoxes: light vs. dark and good vs. evil. We as Mexic Amerindians/mestizas are the dark. We are the evilor at least, the questionable.

    Dark   Light   Opposites  
    Ana Castillo (1995). “Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma”, Plume Books
  • A good lover will do that, see something worthwhile in you that you never knew was there. And when there's something you don't like to see in yourself a good lover won't see it either.

    Ana Castillo (2000). “Peel My Love Like an Onion: A Novel”, Anchor
  • Mexico. Melancholy, profoundly right and wrong, it embraces as it strangulates.

    Norma Alarcón, Ana Castillo, Cherríe Moraga (1989). “Third Woman”
  • It is an absolute impossibility in this society to reversely sexually objectify heterosexual men, just as it is impossible for a poor person of color to be a racist. Such extreme prejudice must be accompanied by the power of society's approval and legislation. While women and poor people of color may become intolerant, personally abusive, even hateful, they do not have enough power to be racist or sexist.

    Power   Men   Color  
    Ana Castillo (1995). “Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma”, Plume Books
  • When I devoted myself to poetry - and poetry is a very serious medium - I don't think the people that knew me as an individual with that tongue-in-cheek kind of humor...well, it didn't always lend itself to my poetry. When you're writing poetry, it's like working with gold, you can't waste anything. You have to be very economical with each word you're going to select. But when you're writing fiction, you can just go on and on; you can be more playful. My editor's main task is to cut back, not ask for more.

    Source: www.english.illinois.edu
  • According to our social pyramid, all men who feel displaced racially, culturally, and/or because of economic hardships will turn on those whom they feel they can order and humiliate, usually women, children, and animals--just as they have been ordered and humiliated by those privileged few who are in power. However, this definition does not explain why there are privileged men who behave this way toward women.

    Children   Animal   Men  
  • When I hear that Jennifer Lopez is such a role model for Latinas, on the one hand I respect her for her business sense and I respect her for her ambition. But she's in the entertainment world. She's done it on her looks and very specifically on her anatomy. Madonna is also considered a great businesswoman and so is Yoko Ono. I feel if I had a young daughter right now, I would feel a little discouraged if that was my daughter's primary role model for success and for young people, for Latinas and Latinos.

  • What you perceive as "liberal" is my independence to choose what i do, with whom, and when. Moreover, it also means that i may choose not to do it, with anyone, ever.

    Mean   Independence   May  
    Ana Castillo (1994). “Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma”
  • Once innocence--an all too-brief state of being, if such a one exists--encounters experience, it is transformed. If that transformation is understood, it becomes knowledge. And if that knowledge is employed, then it becomes wisdom.

  • Whatever it is that people find that they want to work on they also have to remember that they are human beings and they need to save some time for themselves for personal growth, for mental health, for their families, their loved ones so that they will have the strength to continue doing that work.

  • I think the possibilities are endless in terms of what the genre would be like. However, in terms of looking for sources of money, I think we have to be very careful not to fall into Hollywood's commodification of Chicano culture. We could look at the example of Piri Thomas, a successful Puerto Rican writer now living in the Bay Area, who has received repeated offers from Hollywood...and he said he's not going to write about his people doing drugs and going to jail.

    Source: www.english.illinois.edu
  • The writers who have been serious about recreating American literature have always been far and few between. What we do have at the end of the 20th century that we didn't have at the beginning, at that time of the Lost Generation of rich white boys, is a mixture. We're now getting gay writers of color, let's say, and women of color being published. This is unprecedented.

    Gay   Boys   Literature  
    Source: www.english.illinois.edu
  • The language in New Mexico is very different. At first when you hear the speech here, you don't really know what to do with it, but then I just went with it, because as a writer as well as a translator I do believe that translated words are not different names for the same thing. They're different names for different things. I tried to stay as true as I could, so I used Ruben Cobos' dictionary of Southwestern Spanish, and when I went into Spanish I never assumed the word I would use would be the word a nuevomexicano would use.

    Source: www.english.illinois.edu
  • In nature, creatures never ended the lives of others except to survive. To women, abortion was self-defense and preservation of the species. Abortion was not a fancy borne out of the female mind. Abortion was instinct beyond ideas. Abortion was fear (the cat that devours its litter when a predator nears).

    Cat   Self   Ideas  
    Ana Castillo (1990). “Sapogonia: (an Anti-romance in 3/8 Meter)”, Bilingual Press
  • There are things coming from me that I felt I wanted to talk about. My search for my own blend of spirituality, my acknowledgement of my sexuality, my being the single mother of a young man.

  • Women Are Not Roses Women have no beginning only continual flows. Though rivers flow women are not rivers. Women are not roses they are not oceans or stars. i would like to tell her this but i think she already knows.

    Stars   Ocean   Thinking  
    Ana Castillo (1984). “Women are Not Roses”, Arte Publico Press
  • Catch me, as if I have surely been out committing a violation against you, my sin of insisting on existing without you.

    Ana Castillo (2008). “Loverboys”, p.87, W. W. Norton & Company
  • To all the women and the men who ever loved me just a little.

    Men   Littles  
  • I definitely do see language serving its users, and when it no longer serves them we need to look for new words.

    Language   Users  
    Source: www.english.illinois.edu
  • You know you have that zealousness of the young person that feels like you can go out and do it all. You know you save the world, save your gente, save women and before you know it if you try to do that you will burn out very quickly. My feeling is that I always think that and my advice to young people regardless of what times in these decades we've been living in there's always work to be done. The point is what can you do personally that you can live with so that you can get up the next morning and have the strength to start it all over again.

  • Between the sun and poverty there was us for a little while.

    Sun   Littles   Poverty  
    Ana Castillo (2008). “Loverboys”, p.20, W. W. Norton & Company
  • Human sexuality has been regulated and shaped by men to serve men's needs.

    Men   Needs   Sexuality  
    Ana Castillo (1995). “Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma”, Plume Books
  • Our goal should be to achieve joy

    Goal   Joy   Achieve  
    Ana Castillo (1994). “Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma”
  • I've spent my whole life in Chicago being asked where am I from, so that I have a sense of displacement that also is very psychologically disorienting.

  • We were doing the same thing. We will never have "a" Chicano English or Spanish because of regional differences. But I think that because of our bilingual history, we'll always be speaking a special kind of English and Spanish. What we do have to do is fight for the right to use those two languages in the way that it serves us. Nuevo-mexicanos have done it very well for hundreds of years, inventing words where they don't have them. I think the future of our language is where we claim our bilingualism for its utility.

    Source: www.english.illinois.edu
  • Hispanic gives us all one ultimate paternal cultural progenitor: Spain. The diverse cultures already on the American shores when the Europeans arrived, as well as those introduced because of the African slave trade, are completely obliterated by the term. Hispanic is nothing more than a concession made by the U. S. legislature when they saw they couldn't get rid of us. If we won't go away, why not at least Europeanize us, make us presentable guests at the dinner table, take away our feathers and rattles and civilize us once and for all.

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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 42 quotes from the Novelist Ana Castillo, starting from June 15, 1953! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
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