Margaret Atwood Quotes About Character

We have collected for you the TOP of Margaret Atwood's best quotes about Character! Here are collected all the quotes about Character starting from the birthday of the Poet – November 18, 1939! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 11 sayings of Margaret Atwood about Character. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • If you feel that there's the author and then the character, then the book is not working. People have a habit of identifying the author with the narrator, and you can't, obviously, be all of the narrators in all of your books, or else you'd be a very strange person indeed.

    "Double bluff". Interview with Katharine Viner, www.theguardian.com. September 16, 2000.
  • Even in the tragedies, Shakespeare always put in parts for the comic actors because his audience was mixed. He puts in people who talk like aristocrats. He puts in idiots and fools. He puts in certain middle-range characters. And when you go to the Globe, you realize how that all works. The people who paid more sat in seats around the edge. Everybody else paid a penny. They put it into a tin box - that's why we call it the "box office." They stood in the pit, but they were very close, so when Hamlet was doing his soliloquy, it was addressed to you, the audience - right there.

    "Margaret Atwood Remixes Shakespeare’s “The Tempest” as a Prison Drama". Interview With Maddie Oatman, www.motherjones.com. September/October 2016.
  • I did ... learn an important distinction in graduate school: a speculation about who had syphilis when is gossip if it's about your friends, a plot element if it's about a character in a novel, and scholarship if it's about John Keats.

    Margaret Atwood (1984). “Second words: selected critical prose”, Beacon Press, 1984
  • All fiction is about people, unless it's about rabbits pretending to be people. It's all essentially characters in action, which means characters moving through time and changes taking place, and that's what we call 'the plot'.

    "Do keep up". Interview with Emma Brockes, www.theguardian.com. April 12, 2004.
  • Roughing it builds a boy's character, but only certain kinds of roughing it.

    Margaret Atwood (2011). “Wilderness Tips”, p.16, Anchor
  • In the early fight for women's rights, the point was not that women were morally superior or better. The conversation was about the difference between men and women - power, privilege, voting rights, etc. Unfortunately, it quickly moved to the "women are better" argument. If this were true in life or in fiction, we wouldn't have any dark or deep characters. We wouldn't have any Salomes, Carmens, Ophelias. We wouldn't have any jealousy or passion.

    Source: www.motherjones.com
  • Show me a character totally without anxieties and I will show you a boring book.

    Margaret Atwood (1990). “Margaret Atwood: Conversations”, Princeton, N.J. : Ontario Review Press
  • The characters [of The Tempest] have always been favorites of mine. It is one of his meditations on art - what it does.

  • People talking about politics usually start from the ass end backwards in that they think you have a political agenda, and then you make your work fit that cookie cutter. It's the other way around. One works by simple observation, looking into things. It's usually called insight and out of that comes your view - not that you have the view first and then squash everything to make it fit. I'm not interested in cutting the feet off my characters or stretching them to make them fit my certain political view.

    Interview With Marilyn Berlin Snell, www.motherjones.com. July/August 1997.
  • I'm not interested in cutting the feet off my characters or stretching them to make them fit my certain political view.

    Interview with Marilyn Berlin Snell, www.motherjones.com. July/August 1997.
  • The cemetery has ... an inscription: 'Though I walk through the Valley of the Shadow of Death I will Fear No Evil, For Thou Art With Me.' Yes, it does feel deceptively safer with two; but Thou is a slippery character. Every Thou I've known has had a way of going missing.

    Margaret Atwood (2007). “The Blind Assassin: A Novel”, p.44, Anchor
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