JAMES BALDWIN QUOTES VIII

American novelist (1960- )

An invented past can never be used; it cracks and crumbles under the pressures of life like clay in a season of drought.

JAMES BALDWIN

The Fire Next Time

Tags: life


In the beginning—and neither can this be overstated—a Negro just cannot believe that white people are treating him as they do; he does not know what he has done to merit it. And when he realizes that the treatment accorded him has nothing to do with anything he has done, that the attempt of white people to destroy him—for that is what it is—is utterly gratuitous, it is not hard for him to think of white people as devils.

JAMES BALDWIN

The Fire Next Time

Tags: Merit


I do not know many Negroes who are eager to be "accepted" by white people, still less to be loved by them; they, the blacks, simply don't wish to be beaten over the head by the whites every instant of our brief passage on this planet.

JAMES BALDWIN

"Letter from a Region of My Mind", The New Yorker, November 17, 1962

Tags: racism


The tendrils of shame clutched at them, however they turned, all the dirty words they knew commented on all they did.

JAMES BALDWIN

Another Country

Tags: shame


I bet you think we're in a g***am park. You don't know we're in one of the world's great jungles. You don't know that behind all them damn dainty trees and sh*t, people are screwing and fixing and dying. Dying, baby, right now while we move through this darkness in this man's taxicab. And you don't know it, even when you're told; you don't know it, even when you see it.

JAMES BALDWIN

Another Country

Tags: trees


People who remember court madness through pain, the pain of the perpetually recurring death of their innocence; people who forget court another kind of madness, the madness of the denial of pain and the hatred of innocence; and the world is mostly divided between madmen who remember and madmen who forget.

JAMES BALDWIN

Giovanni's Room

Tags: madness


Nothing tamed or broke her, nothing touched her, neither kindness, nor scorn, nor hatred, nor love. She had never thought of prayer. It was unimaginable that she would ever bend her knees and come crawling along a dusty floor to anybody’s altar.

JAMES BALDWIN

Go Tell It on the Mountain

Tags: kindness


Passion is terrifying, it can rock you, change you, bring your head under, as when a wind rises from the bottom of the sea, and you're out there in the craft of your mortality, alone.

JAMES BALDWIN

Just Above My Head

Tags: change


Hatred, which could destroy so much, never failed to destroy the man who hated and this was an immutable law.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son

Tags: law


But just as a society must have a scapegoat, so hatred must have a symbol.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son

Tags: society


But no one was interested in the facts. They preferred the invention because this invention expressed and corroborated their hates and fears so perfectly.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son

Tags: invention


No people come into possession of a culture without having paid a heavy price for it.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son

Tags: culture


Confusion is a luxury which only the very, very young can possibly afford.

JAMES BALDWIN

Giovanni's Room


People who shut their eyes to reality simply invite their own destruction, and anyone who insists on remaining in a state of innocence long after that innocence is dead turns himself into a monster.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son

Tags: innocence


It was the Lord who knew of the impossibility every parent in that room faced: how to prepare the child for the day when the child would be despised and how to create in the child - by what means? - a stronger antidote to this poison than one had found for oneself.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son


To smash something is the ghetto’s chronic need.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son


Negro life is in fact as debased and impoverished as our theology claims.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son

Tags: life


It is this image, living yet, which we perpetually seek to evade with good works; and this image which makes of all our good works an intolerable mockery.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son


Not everything that is faced can be changed. But nothing can be changed until it is faced.

JAMES BALDWIN

"As Much Truth As One Can Bear", New York Times Book Review, January 14, 1962


But there is a complementary faith among the damned which involves their gathering of the stones with which those who walk in the light shall stone them; or there exists among the intolerably degraded the perverse and powerful desire to force into the arena of the actual those fantastic crimes if which they have been accused, achieving their vengeance and their own destruction through making the nightmare real.

JAMES BALDWIN

Notes of a Native Son

Tags: desire