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Marginalization Quotes

Quotes tagged as "marginalization" Showing 1-30 of 69
Erik Pevernagie
“Why some people feel more comfortable in the “margin” of society, may simply be that it imparts them more breathing space, shores up their identity, embodies a gateway to self-determination, and confers them a sense of sovereignty, allowing more time for stressless apprehension and thoughtful reflection. (“If he doesn't play ball » )”
Erik Pevernagie

Tomi Adeyemi
“You don’t have to be afraid—"
"I am always afraid!"
I don’t know what shocks me more—the power in my voice or the words themselves.
Afraid.
I am always afraid.
It’s a truth I locked away years ago, a fact I fought hard to overcome.”
Tomi Adeyemi, Children of Blood and Bone

Eric    Weiner
“Geniuses are always marginalized to one degree or another. Someone wholly invested in the status quo is unlikely to disrupt it.”
Eric Weiner, The Geography of Genius: A Search for the World's Most Creative Places from Ancient Athens to Silicon Valley

Junot Díaz
“We all know that there are language forms that are considered impolite and out of order, no matter what truths these languages might be carrying. If you talk with a harsh, urbanized accent and you use too many profanities, that will often get you barred from many arenas, no matter what you’re trying to say. On the other hand, polite, formal language is allowed almost anywhere even when all it is communicating is hatred and violence. Power always privileges its own discourse while marginalizing those who would challenge it or that are the victims of its power.”
Junot Díaz

Jeanette Winterson
“I am a writer who happens to love women. I am not a lesbian who happens to write.”
Jeanette Winterson

“And what is an authentic madman? It is a man who preferred to become mad, in the socially accepted sense of the word, rather than forfeit a certain superior idea of human honor. So society has strangled in its asylums all those it wanted to get rid of or protect itself from, because they refused to become its accomplices in certain great nastinesses. For a madman is also a man whom society did not want to hear and whom it wanted to prevent from uttering certain intolerable truths.”
Artaud, Antonin

Olga Tokarczuk
“The worst thing possible is to feel fully valued by others, and particularly – as I would put it – to be considered of standard value. It means we become literalized, and we come to a halt in the development that a lack of full appreciation prompts us to strive towards. When a person recognizes that he has become perfect and fulfilled, he should kill himself.”
Olga Tokarczuk, The Empusium: A Health Resort Horror Story

“When we buy into those limiting and marginalizing stories, our souls are in exile. We spend our days worrying about pleasing others rather than doing what’s right for us—and, ultimately, what’s right for our families, our community, and our world.”
Kathy Sparrow, Ignite Your Leadership: Proven Tools for Leaders to Energize Teams, Fuel Momentum and Accelerate Results

Louis Yako
“[I]f we objected to any blanket statements that would portray Black people in a certain way, or statements that insinuate that any Muslim is potentially violent or a terrorist, or that queer people are pedophiles, why aren’t we using the same basic critical tool to reject the assumption that being white necessarily makes one privileged or racist? Why are we not using another basic critical tool by asking yet another important question: what percentage of white people is extremely wealthy and privileged, and how/why it is problematic to put all whites in one basket as it would be if we do to any other group of people? Anyone who has traveled through the poor parts of white America, places like West Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, and many others that I have personally visited and observed, will know that there is a big percentage of white people who are, in some cases, as poor as newly arrived undocumented immigrants.

[From “The Trump Age: Critical Questions” published on CounterPunch on June 23, 2023]”
Louis Yako

“She is marginalized as a young girl in a society with very fixed definitions ofwhat womanhood entails, and also as a Palestinian who is homeless and whose entire nation has been displaced”
Liana Badr, The Eye of the Mirror

Andrew Leland
“The problem arises, as [Adrienne] Asch observed, when "a single trait stands in for the whole, the trait obliterates the whole." Disabled people, like African Americans or any other marginalized group, are dehumanized and oppressed by being reduced to a single, devalued trait; the path to justice must be driven by the rehabilitation of that characteristic.”
Andrew Leland, The Country of the Blind: A Memoir at the End of Sight

“. . . his innate repulsiveness, his constant and total marginality, prevented us, without our realizing it, from mobbing and destroying him in that way. Like when a pack of animals isolated a dying member yet respects him: it isolates him because he's dying, but respects him because, by the very act of dying, he's a millimeter away from discovery.”
Giorgo Vasta

“. . . his innate repulsiveness, his constant and total marginality, prevented us, without our realizing it, from mobbing and destroying him in that way. Like when a pack of animals isolated a dying member yet respects him: it isolates him because he's dying, but respects him because, by the very act of dying, he's a millimeter away from discovery.”
Giorgio Vasta, Il tempo materiale

“The law is a site where marginalization is challenged and resisted by those who are subjugated. On the other hand, the law reinforces the patriarchal discourse, yet on the other hand, it has the authority to set out the social order. Women and marginalized groups have used the law to challenge the hierarchy and dominant notions”
Shalu Nigam

“The law is a site where marginalization is challenged and resisted by those who are subjugated. On the one hand, the law reinforces the patriarchal discourse, yet on the other hand, it has the authority to set out the social order. Women and marginalized groups have used the law to challenge the hierarchy and dominant notions”
Shalu Nigam

Suppression Techniques
1. Making invisible: Silencing or otherwise marginalizing people in opposition by ignoring them.
2. Ridicule: Portraying the arguments of an opponent, or the opponents themselves, in a ridiculing fashion.
3. Withholding information: Excluding a person from the decision making process, or knowingly not forwarding information so as to make the person less able to make an informed choice.
4. Double bind: Punishing or otherwise belittling the actions of an opponent, regardless of how they act.
5. Heaping blame/putting to shame: Embarrassing someone or insinuating that they themselves are to blame for their position.”
Berit As

Aaron Fricke
“It’s not easy growing up knowing you’re different from everyone else. But it’s even harder when those differences make people want to hurt you.”
Aaron Fricke, Reflections of a Rock Lobster: A Story About Growing Up Gay

Aaron Fricke
“I wanted to be happy. I wanted to be free to love who I loved without fear.”
Aaron Fricke, Reflections of a Rock Lobster: A Story About Growing Up Gay

“Only in the face of each other's irreducible differences can we hope to create societies that transcend their own profoundest marginalization.”
John Wall, Ethics in Light of Childhood

Jamie Arpin-Ricci
“Advocating for 2SLGBTQIA+ folks- for any marginalized group- is about affirming the full dignity and humanity of every person, without requiring us to reshape who we are to fit into the expectations of others. Yet, there’s often a subtle (or not-so-subtle) pressure to adjust or tone down parts of our identities so that those in the majority—often cisgender, heterosexual folks—feel more comfortable engaging with our message.

Here's the tension: on the one hand, we want to be effective advocates, building bridges and finding common ground; on the other, the expectation that we should compromise or simplify parts of who we are to be more palatable can erase the very unique humanity we are advocating for. When identity is compromised with conditional acceptance, it reinforces the idea that who we are is something optional or negotiable.
Imagine if you were asked to hide or downplay essential aspects of your own identity just to be heard. It’s not just uncomfortable—it sends a message that your full self is unwelcome.”
Jamie Arpin-Ricci

“People have their fictions and believe what they have mutually agreed upon. But you know, it's not necessarily true that things are only like this or that... I urge you to create your own fiction, one that says it's you who's perfect, for instance.”
Olga Takarczuk

“The worst thing possible is to feel fully valued by others, and particularly – as I would put it – to be considered of standard value. It means we become literalized, and we come to a halt in the development that a lack of full appreciation prompts us to strive towards. When a person recognizes that he has become perfect and fulfilled, he should kill himself.”
Olga Takarczuk

Olga Tokarczuk
“People have their fictions and believe what they have mutually agreed upon. But you know, it's not necessarily true that things are only like this or that... I urge you to create your own fiction, one that says it's you who's perfect, for instance.”
Olga Tokarczuk, The Empusium: A Health Resort Horror Story

Adrian Wooldridge
“Один зі способів зрозуміти нещодавню історію — уявити собі чергу по каву: уранці ви йдете до «Старбаксу», відчайдушно потребуючи чашки звичайної кави, перш ніж почнете класти цеглу, а тим часом молода особа в костюмі для йоги від Lulu Lemon влізає перед вами без черги і замовляє лате без піни зі знежиреним мигдалевим молоком — на двадцять осіб. Потім ця людина, яка влізла без черги, обертається до вас і починає читати вам лекцію про те, який ви сексист, агресивний «расист, котрому, перш ніж висловлюватися, варто згадати про свої привілеї.”
Adrian Wooldridge, The Aristocracy of Talent: How Meritocracy Made the Modern World

“The fight for historical truth is always a fight for present dignity.”
Adeel Ahmed Khan

“A strong majority builds. A weak majority blames. A failing majority, drowning in its own inadequacy, turns to oppression—clinging to cruelty as a substitute for achievement, feeding on the suffering of its minorities to mask its own decay.”
Adeel Ahmed Khan

“When injustice becomes predictable, it stops looking like injustice and starts feeling like weather.”
Adeel Ahmed Khan

“The most dangerous injustice is the one that flatters the educated while erasing the vulnerable.”
Adeel Ahmed Khan

Brooke Gladstone
“The President, however, did instruct the Secretary of Health and Human Services, RFK Jr., to determine whether NPR and PBS are complying with the statutory mandate that no person shall be subjected to discrimination in employment on the grounds of race, color, religion, national origin or sex. All this based on the idea that our nation, now firmly under the leadership of white Christian men, must safeguard, at all costs, the marginalized, disfavored voices of white Christian men.

All others, excluding Trump allies, have risen to power through an unjust system.”
Brooke Gladstone

Jamie Arpin-Ricci
“Hope must be tethered to accountability, shaped by memory, and measured not by the language of the powerful but by the lived reality of the marginalized.”
Jamie Arpin-Ricci

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