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Author

Jean-Paul Sartre

/jean-paul-sartre-quotes-and-sayings

163 Quotes
19 Works

Author Summary

About Jean-Paul Sartre on QuoteMust

Jean-Paul Sartre currently has 163 indexed quotes and 19 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

Being and Nothingness Between Existentialism and Marxism Black Orpheus Existentialism and Human Emotions Existentialism Is a Humanism Le diable et le bon dieu Les Mains sales Nausea No Exit No Exit and Three Other Plays The Age of Reason The Emotions: Outline of a Theory The Flies The Reprieve The Respectable Prostitute/Lucifer and the Lord/In Camera The Wall The Words The Wretched of the Earth We Have Only This Life to Live

Quotes

All quote cards for Jean-Paul Sartre

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My thought is me: that's why I can't stop. I exist because I think...and I can't stop myself from thinking. At this very moment, it's frightful, if I exist, it is because I am horrified at existing. I am the one who pulls myself from the nothingness to which I aspire: the hatred, the disgust of existing, there are as many ways to make myself exist, to thrust myself into existence. Thoughts are born at the back of me, like sudden giddiness, I feel them being born behind my head...if I yield, they're going to come round in front of me, between my eyes, and I always yield, the thought grows and grows and there it is, immense, filling me completely and renewing my existence.

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How come he cannot recognize his own cruelty now turned against him? How come he can't see his own savagery as a colonist in the savagery of these oppressed peasants who have absorbed it through every pore and for which they can find no cure? The answer is simple: this arrogant individual, whose power of authority and fear of losing it has gone to his head, has difficulty remembering he was once a man; he thinks he is a whip or a gun; he is convinced that the domestication of the "inferior races" is obtained by governing their reflexes. He disregards the human memory, the indelible reminders; and then, above all, there is this that perhaps he never know: we only become what we are by radically negating deep down what others have done to us.

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Jean-Paul Sartre

The Wretched of the Earth