Quotes about Narrative
Unaligned, nobly interventionist, unbrooked by nations and political parties, private interests or public exhaustion, Amnesty International declares states, walls, borders irrelevant to its humanitarian goals, detrimental to its tasks, by summoning responsibility and refusing to accept a myopic government's own narrative of its behavior.
— Toni Morrison
There's a way out for you personally. And you can lead by example. Let's put you in a position to celebrate the positive. It's easy to get trapped talking about what's bad, but after today, we are no longer going to choose easy. We are going to decide to celebrate the positive. Together, let's change the narrative and talk about what's good.
— Kevin Hart
As for dialogue, I think it keeps things moving to cut to the chase.
— Jerry B. Jenkins
Actually, a myth is a story that is not just not true, but it's a story that is especially true. And I think the myth of Jesus is especially true.
— Jay Parini
What I'm really proud of Beyonce and Solange, they understand the importance of creating the narrative. It's all about the narrative and how you position yourself with your narrative.
— Mathew Knowles
It is vitally important that we pay attention to the narrative framework in which the Old Testament laws are set.
— Christopher Wright
All this happened, more or less. The war parts, anyway, are pretty much true.
— Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
At a time when history made its way slowly, the few events were easily remembered and woven into a backdrop, known to everyone, before which private life unfolded the gripping show of its adventures. Nowadays, time moves forward at a rapid pace. Forgotten overnight, a historic event glistens the next day like the morning dew and thus is no longer the backdrop to a narrator's tale but rather an amazing adventure enacted against the background of the over-familiar banality of private life.
— Milan Kundera
The reign of imagology begins where history ends
— Milan Kundera
The way contemporary history is told is like a huge concert where they present all of Beethoven's one hundred thirty-eight opuses one after the other, but actually play just the first eight bars of each.
— Milan Kundera
I love writing every song I can like a little mini movie. I like to have a character, or some characters, and really paint a picture with the song.
— Dolly Parton
One of the first lessons that I hope you grasp is that woven into meaningful literature, so tightly that it can't be separated, is a telling lesson, even in stories as short as this one. Always? I ask. Always! she confirms. Good stories teach!
— Camron Wright