“thus to name
it to raise stones
to wound the bark
with stones
to batter it with
stones the stones to
cut the bark to fester
in the bark
TREE OF OLD AGE
stone patterns: starting
from the roots they
reach the highest leaves
*
The next day gone with walking
Flutes were sounding in his ears”
Rothenberg, Jerome. Technicians of the Sacred a Range of Poetries from Africa, America, Asia, Europe, and Oceania. Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 1969. p. 93. The Flight of Quetzalcoatl Translated by J.R. from Spanish prose translation by Angel Maria Garibay K., Epica Nahuatl (Biblioteca del Estudiante Universitario, Mexico, 1945), pp. 59-63. First publication in English by Unicorn Book Shop (Brighton, England, 1967).
Catalog Record
Internet Archive
“We know the patterns of totalitarianism— the single political party, the control of schools, press, radio, the arts, the sciences, and the church to support autocratic authority; these are the age-old patterns against which men have struggled for three thousand years.”
Eleanor Roosevelt, “The Struggle for Human Rights” Speech at the Sorbonne, Paris, September 28, 1948, in Allida Black, The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers: Vol. 1: The Human Rights Years, 1945-1948, 900-905.
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Columbian College of Arts & Sciences
“It isn’t black I said over the phone well I thought
it was she said, not being fanciful, and I
was in a motel in Colorado at the time. Whose head
was it really I repeat. For we never leave here
and nothing fossilizes but stonelike mossy
patterns might be made, colors transformed
walk to the hospital, everyone’s mad at me, who cares?”
Notley, Alice. "License." Poetry 206, no. 4 (2015): 402-03. Accessed June 2, 2021. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43592788.
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Poetry Foundation
“A handwritten note, in Marcuse's writing, on the themes of the project indicates that he and Neumann intended to analyze conflicting tendencies toward social change and social cohesion; forces of freedom and necessity in social change; subjective and objective factors that produce social change; patterns of social change, such as evolution and revolution; and the nature of social change, whether progressive, regressive, or cyclical.”
Marcuse, Herbert, and Douglas Kellner. One-Dimensional Man. London: Routledge, 2002. p. xx.
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Routledge
“I use the terms ‘biological’ and ‘biology’ not in the sense of the scientific discipline, but in order to designate the process and the dimension in which inclinations, behavior patterns, and aspirations become vital needs which, if not satisfied, would cause dysfunction of the organism.”
Marcuse, Herbert. An Essay on Liberation. Boston, MA: Beacon, 1969. p. 14.
Catalog Record
Beacon Press
“In this way, a society constantly recreates, this side of consciousness and ideology, patterns of behavior and aspiration as part of the ‘nature’ of its people, and unless the revolt reaches into this ‘second’ nature, into these ingrown patterns, social change will remain ‘incomplete,’ even self-defeating.”
Marcuse, Herbert. An Essay on Liberation. Boston, MA: Beacon, 1969. p. 14.
Catalog Record
Beacon Press