25 Quotes by Roland Barthes about mourning
- Author Roland Barthes
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Sometimes roused by desires (say, the trip to Tunisia), but they're desires of before--somehow anachronistic; they come from another shore, another country, the country of before.--Today it is a flat, dreary country--virtually without water--and paltry.
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- Author Roland Barthes
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Everyone is “extremely nice”—and yet I feel entirely alone. (“Abandonitis”).
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- Author Roland Barthes
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Only I know what my road has been for the last year and a half: the economy of this motionless and anything but spectacular mourning that has kept me unceasingly separate by its demands; a separation that I have ultimately always projected to bring to a close by a book--Stubbornness, secrecy.
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- Author Roland Barthes
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Everything pains me. The merest trifle rouses a sense of abandonment.I'm impatient with other people, their will to live, their universe. Attracted by a decision to withdraw from everyone [no longer bearing the world of Y].
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- Author Roland Barthes
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To whom could I put this question (with any hope of an answer)? Does being able to live without someone you loved mean you loved her less than you thought...?
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- Author Roland Barthes
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Each of us has his own rhythm of suffering.
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- Author Roland Barthes
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As soon as someone dies, frenzied construction of the future (shifting furniture, etc.): futuromania.
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- Author Roland Barthes
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Suffering; impossibility of being comfortable anywhere; oppression, irritations and remorse one after the next, everything under the sign "wretchedness of man," used by Pascal.
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- Author Roland Barthes
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Like love, mourning affects the world—and the worldly—with unreality, with importunity. I resist the world, I suffer from what it demands of me, from its demands. The world increases my sadness, my dryness, my confusion, my irritation, etc. The world depresses me.
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