Black people are victims of an enormous amount of violence. None of those things can take place without the complicity of the people who run the schools and the city.
Meaning of the quote
Toni Morrison, a famous American novelist, says that Black people experience a lot of violence and that this violence happens because the people who run schools and cities allow it to happen. They are partly responsible for the violence against Black people because they do not stop it from happening. Morrison's words remind us that we all need to work together to make sure that everyone is treated fairly and with respect, no matter their race.
About Toni Morrison
Toni Morrison was an acclaimed American novelist and editor who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993. Her works addressed the harsh consequences of racism in the United States and the Black American experience. Some of her most famous novels include The Bluest Eye, Song of Solomon, and Beloved.
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You marvel at the economy and this choice of words. How many ways can you describe the sky and the moon? After Sylvia Plath, what can you say?
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Make a difference about something other than yourselves.
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Somebody has to take responsibility for being a leader.
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I’m always annoyed about why black people have to bear the brunt of everybody else’s contempt. If we are not totally understanding and smiling, suddenly we’re demons.
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I get angry about things, then go on and work.
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I like marriage. The idea.
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Some Native American writers enjoy being called Native American writers.
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You need a whole community to raise a child. I have raised two children, alone.
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There is nothing of any consequence in education, in the economy, in city planning, in social policy that does not concern black people.
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Everywhere, everywhere, children are the scorned people of the earth.
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If you’re going to hold someone down you’re going to have to hold on by the other end of the chain. You are confined by your own repression.
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As you enter positions of trust and power, dream a little before you think.
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In becoming an American, from Europe, what one has in common with that other immigrant is contempt for me-it’s nothing else but color.
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My children are delightful people, whom I would love even if they weren’t my children.
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A lot of black people believe that Jews in this country have become white. They behave like white people rather than Jewish people.
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She is a friend of mind. She gather me, man. The pieces I am, she gather them and give them back to me in all the right order. It’s good, you know, when you got a woman who is a friend of your mind.
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No one ever talks about the moment you found that you were white. Or the moment you found out you were black. That’s a profound revelation. The minute you find that out, something happens. You have to renegotiate everything.
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I merged those two words, black and feminist, because I was surrounded by black women who were very tough and and who always assumed they had to work and rear children and manage homes.
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Freeing yourself was one thing; claiming ownership of that freed self was another.
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I’m not entangled in shaping my work according to other people’s views of how I should have done it.
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If there is a book that you want to read, but it hasn’t been written yet, you must be the one to write it.
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If you surrendered to the air, you could ride it.
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Nelson Mandela is, for me, the single statesman in the world. The single statesman, in that literal sense, who is not solving all his problems with guns. It’s truly unbelievable.
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Black people have always been used as a buffer in this country between powers to prevent class war.
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Black literature is taught as sociology, as tolerance, not as a serious, rigorous art form.
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Schools must stop being holding pens to keep energetic young people off the job market and off the streets. We stretch puberty out a long, long time.
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Everybody gets everything handed to them. The rich inherit it. I don’t mean just inheritance of money. I mean what people take for granted among the middle and upper classes, which is nepotism, the old-boy network.
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For a long time I was convinced that the conflict between Jewish people and black people in this country was a media event.
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I always looked upon the acts of racist exclusion, or insult, as pitiable, from the other person. I never absorbed that. I always thought that there was something deficient about such people.
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One of my kids was born in 1968. There were going to be political difficulties, but they were never going to have that level of hatred and contempt that my brothers and my sister and myself were exposed to.
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Women’s rights is not only an abstraction, a cause; it is also a personal affair. It is not only about us; it is also about me and you. Just the two of us.
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I don’t think anybody cares about unwed mothers unless they’re black or poor. The question is not morality, the question is money. That’s what we’re upset about.
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The unflattering reviews are painful for short periods of time; the badly written ones are deeply, deeply insulting. That reviewer took no time to really read the book.
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The ability of writers to imagine what is not the self, to familiarize the strange and mystify the familiar, is the test of their power.
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Black people are victims of an enormous amount of violence. None of those things can take place without the complicity of the people who run the schools and the city.
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I think some aspects of writing can be taught. Obviously, you can’t teach vision or talent. But you can help with comfort.
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