"Once various forms were signed, I was separated from my free will, led down the corridors into a room which was now to be the boundary of my existence, told to surrender my clothes, handed that comic invention, the hospital gown, and sent to bed in broad daylight like a child being stripped of her privileges."

5 likes

Source: Dorothy West (1996). “The Living Is Easy”, p.7, Feminist Press at CUNY

About the author

Dorothy West

Novelist, Essayist

Dorothy West was a prominent African American writer and a key figure in the Harlem Renaissance, known for her exploration of race and identity.

All quotes by Dorothy West →

Same author

More quotes by Dorothy West

See all →
Dorothy West Novelist, Essayist

"Because if you don't know someone all that well, you react to their surface qualities, the superficial stereotypes-they throw off like sparks. But once you fight through the sparks and get to the person, you find just that, a person, a big jumble of likes, dislikes, fears, and desires."

Read quote