"Anything is possible. A man is what he makes up his mind to be."
About Gish Jen
Gish Jen — Life and Legacy
Gish Jen is a prominent American author whose works delve into the complexities of identity and belonging, particularly within immigrant communities. Her novel 'The Love Wife' exemplifies her focus on cultural nuances and family dynamics, revealing the intricate ways in which individuals navigate their identities in a multicultural landscape. Jen's core thinking revolves around the idea that identity is fluid and shaped by various cultural influences. In her words, 'The immigrant experience is a journey of identity,' she articulates the struggles and triumphs faced by those who find themselves straddling multiple worlds. This perspective is evident in her characters, who often grapple with the expectations of their heritage while seeking acceptance in their new environments. The relevance of Jen's quotes and ideas continues to resonate today, as they reflect ongoing conversations about cultural identity and the immigrant experience. Her work invites readers to reflect on their own identities and the complexities of belonging in an increasingly diverse world.
Quote collection
Gish Jen quotes
19 quotes — follow a thought to its full quote page.
"Whatever I do in life, I'm almost always aware that there's another way to do it."
"I like to listen. I'm much more interested in listening than in speaking, for sure."
"... there is ... a big aspect of play in writing novels, and making the story more and more elaborate is just more and more fun."
"When I think about why I would be a writer, why I should continue to be a writer, it seems to me one of the few things you can dowhere you're never bored."
"A white person was by definition somebody. Other people needed, across their hearts, one steel rib."
"I think that there is a bias in the current literary climate, which is not only very Western but very male."
"I hate to generalize because there are always so many exceptions to any rule."
"It's human to hear stories and to know how people live and to imagine how that is for them. It's very interdependent!"
"A man was the sum of his limits; freedom only made him see how much so."
"The independents are the ones who tend to commit suicide. I'm not against this way of being in the world. Individuals have brought us many treasures. You can't just say that's a bad way of being in the world - it's not. But it's not everyone's way of being in the world."
"Chinese language tends to be quick, economical. To know what people are saying, you always need to know what the context is."
"It's a matter of whether you see the self as fundamentally in relationship to other selves or not - whether you see the boundary between self and the world as relatively permeable, which makes you "interdependent" (collectivist) in outlook, or relatively impermeable, which makes you "independent" (individualistic)."
"That there should be a purpose to suffering, that a person should be chosen for it, special - these are houses of the mind, in which whole peoples have found shelter."
"There's nothing about interdependence that would keep somebody from making art."
"For students who are in the most creative group in America to somehow be presumed to be narrow is just completely meshugga."
"These are ideas that work for many, and that may well reflect your true understanding of life."
"Many women tend toward the interdependent end of things, we tend to see ourselves in relationship to others to a far greater degree than men."
"I'm trying to give people an idea of what black looks like and what white looks like before I introduce them to gray."