Prefatory quote ideas: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 5:
 
—'''Psalms 74:20''', as presented in ''The Book of Common Prayer'', 1549 / 1559 / 1662). Quoted in Gauldie, Enid. (1974). ''Cruel Habitations: a history of working-class housing 1780-1918.''
 
 
''“The beginning of wisdom is to call things by their proper name.”''
 
—'''Confucius''' (551–479 BC)
 
More literal translation: “If names be not correct, language is not in accordance with the truth of things."
 
Proverb form: Simplified Chinese: 名正才能言順. Pinyin: Míng zhèng cáinéng yán shùn. Google Translate: "Only with a right name."
 
Chengyu (four-character idiom): 名正言順. Míng zhèng yán shùn. ("call things by their own names." i.e. legitimate, valid, true.
 
 
''"First, the taking in of scattered particulars under one Idea, so that everyone understands what is being talked about ... Sec­ond, the separation of the Idea into parts, by dividing it at the joints, as nature directs, not breaking any limb in half as a bad carver might."''
 
—'''Plato''' (ca 428-348 BC), Phaedrus'''Phaedrus,'' 265D. (also frontispiece quote in Christopher Alexander, ''Notes on the Synthesis of Form,'' 1964).
 
 
Line 30 ⟶ 41:
 
—'''Charles Abrams''', ''The Future of Housing''. 1946. 
 
 
''Their watching faces,''
 
''as I walk the autumn road''
 
''make me a traveler.''
 
—Richard Wright, ca.1959.
 
 
Line 42 ⟶ 62:
 
 
"''Liminality '' (from the Latin word for threshold) is a term..for a variety of ''states of passage, ''through which designated members of a given culture travel at specified times...Because they occupy no fixed status in the liminal state, they are considered ambiguous beings--even dangerous--and their presence is subject to ritual regulation. Special precautions are taken to separate them from ordinary social life...[Liminal states] share a suspension of the commonplace; intermingling with unfamiliar others in strange settings; and a heightened sense of uncertainty, of things being unfinished and in process.  Although liminal passages are usually undertaken in well-mapped territory from which the voyager is expected to return, ''occasionally the process stalls....We will argue that what unites the phenomena gathered up in the term homelessness is liminality (resolved or stalled) and abeyance gone awry." ''
 
— from '''Kim Hopper''' & Jim Baumohl. "Redefining the Cursed Word: A Historical Interpretation of American Homelessness." in [Baumohl 1996].
Line 122 ⟶ 142:
—'''Naida Lavon''', quoted in "For Portland, Ore., Woman, Home These Days Is Where She Parks Her Minivan," by Nellie Gilles, ''All Things Considered'', June 23, 2020.
<br />
 
<br />
"There’s no such thing as agency when you become unhoused: There’s a belief system that these programs have that beggars can’t be choosers."
 
-'''Theo Henderson'''. <nowiki>https://www.curbed.com/2020/10/theo-henderson-has-influence-but-no-house.html</nowiki>.
----