"In London, in children’s books, life is too orderly and one longs for the vitality of the wild; in Paris, order is an achievement, hard won against the natural chaos and cruelty of adult life; in New York, we begin most stories in an indifferent city and the child has to create a kind of order within it. Each of these schemes reflects a history: the English vision being a natural consequence of a peaceful nation with a reformist history and in search of adventure; the French of a troubled nation with a violent history in search of peace; and the American of an individualistic and sporadically violent country with a strong ethos of family isolation and improvised rules."
Taken from this New Yorker article about Babar the Elephant of all things.
This is just one of the many reasons academia is crazy. Thanks, Aurora!
EDIT: I liked this quote, too: "There is allure in escaping from the constraints that button you up and hold you; there is also allure in the constraints and the buttons. We would all love to be free, untrammelled elephants, but we long, too, for a green suit."
Taken from this New Yorker article about Babar the Elephant of all things.
This is just one of the many reasons academia is crazy. Thanks, Aurora!
EDIT: I liked this quote, too: "There is allure in escaping from the constraints that button you up and hold you; there is also allure in the constraints and the buttons. We would all love to be free, untrammelled elephants, but we long, too, for a green suit."