129 Quotes by Ishmael Reed
- Author Ishmael Reed
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Joel Chandler Harris, who created a multi billion dollar industry, everything from his books, to Disney’s “Song of the South” based upon the Uncle Remus stories. He got his start by transcribing the stories of slave Informants. I’m sure that none them got a dime.
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- Author Ishmael Reed
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I wasn’t part of any sixties movement. I’m skeptical of movements. I’m part of the times that I’m in.
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- Author Ishmael Reed
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I think Black intellectuals see too deeply. That’s the problem. It’s a cause of anxiety, because we see things differently.
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- Author Ishmael Reed
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For generations comedians have made jokes about Scots-Irish in the South inter-breeding. “I am my own grandpa” and all that stuff; you know, because they all were marrying their first cousins.
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- Author Ishmael Reed
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Do you think that Gwendolyn Brooks would give an award to someone who hated Black women, the lie that was circulated throughout New York and reached all the way down to Martinique where I was a guest Professor? The lie was circulated by people who don’t read my books.
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- Author Ishmael Reed
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Dance is the universal art, the common joy of expression. Those who cannot dance are imprisoned in their own ego and cannot live well with other people and the world. They have lost the tune of life. They only live in cold thinking. Their feelings are deeply repressed while they attach themselves forlornly to the earth.
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- Author Ishmael Reed
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In Haitian mythology there is the figure Ghede, who in West Africa, is Iku, whose role is to show “each man his devil.” He’s represented by a figure wearing a top hat and smoking a cigar. That’s my gig.
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- Author Ishmael Reed
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America is the smart-aleck adolescent who’s “been around” and has his own hot rod.
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- Author Ishmael Reed
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A black boxer’s career is the perfect metaphor for the career of a black male. Every day is like being in the gym, sparring with impersonal opponents as one faces the rudeness and hostility that a black male must confront in the United States, where he is the object of both fear and fascination.
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