The vote means nothing to women. We should be armed.
Meaning of the quote
This quote suggests that Edna O'Brien believed women's right to vote was not enough to achieve true equality. Instead, she thought women needed to be prepared to fight for their rights, even if it meant taking up arms. The quote reflects a frustration with the slow pace of progress and a belief that more radical action was necessary to bring about change for women.
About Edna O’Brien
Edna O’Brien was an acclaimed Irish novelist, memoirist, and short story writer. Her works often explored the inner lives and challenges faced by women in Ireland. She was a trailblazer, breaking taboos and winning numerous prestigious awards over her long, distinguished career.
More quotes from Edna O’Brien
Writers really live in the mind and in hotels of the soul.
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I’m an Irish Catholic and I have a long iceberg of guilt.
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I am obsessive, also I am industrious. Besides, the time when you are most alive and most aware is in childhood and one is trying to recapture that heightened awareness.
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Countries are either mothers or fathers, and engender the emotional bristle secretly reserved for either sire.
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My hand does the work and I don’t have to think; in fact, were I to think, it would stop the flow. It’s like a dam in the brain that bursts.
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The vote means nothing to women. We should be armed.
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I have some women friends but I prefer men. Don’t trust women. There is a built-in competition between women.
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Writing is like carrying a fetus.
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Recollection is not something that I can summon up, it simply comes and I am the servant of it.
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In every question and every remark tossed back and forth between lovers who have not played out the last fugue, there is one question and it is this: ‘Is there someone new?’
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