J. G. Ballard – 13 Quotes

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13 Quotes by J. G. Ballard

 

The chief role of the universities is to prolong adolescence into middle age, at which point early retirement ensures that we lack the means or the will to enforce significant change.

– J. G. Ballard


The American Dream has run out of gas. The car has stopped. It no longer supplies the world with its images, its dreams, its fantasies. No more. It’s over. It supplies the world with its nightmares now: the Kennedy assassination, Watergate, Vietnam.

– J. G. Ballard


Electronic aids, particularly domestic computers, will help the inner migration, the opting out of reality. Reality is no longer going to be the stuff out there, but the stuff inside your head. It’s going to be commercial and nasty at the same time.

– J. G. Ballard


I would sum up my fear about the future in one word: boring. And that’s my one fear: that everything has happened nothing exciting or new or interesting is ever going to happen again… the future is just going to be a vast, conforming suburb of the soul.

– J. G. Ballard


What our children have to fear is not the cars on the highways of tomorrow but our own pleasure in calculating the most elegant parameters of their deaths.

– J. G. Ballard


In a completely sane world, madness is the only freedom.

– J. G. Ballard


I came to live in Shepperton in 1960. I thought: the future isn’t in the metropolitan areas of London. I want to go out to the new suburbs, near the film studios. This was the England I wanted to write about, because this was the new world that was emerging.

– J. G. Ballard


The future is going to be boring. The suburbanisation of the planet will continue, and the suburbanisation of the soul will follow soon after.

– J. G. Ballard


Writing a novel is one of those modern rites of passage, I think, that lead us from an innocent world of contentment, drunkenness, and good humor, to a state of chronic edginess and the perpetual scanning of bank statements.

– J. G. Ballard


I don’t think it’s possible to touch people’s imagination today by aesthetic means.

– J. G. Ballard


Everything is becoming science fiction. From the margins of an almost invisible literature has sprung the intact reality of the 20th century.

– J. G. Ballard


Science and technology multiply around us. To an increasing extent they dictate the languages in which we speak and think. Either we use those languages, or we remain mute.

– J. G. Ballard


The surrealists, and the modern movement in painting as a whole, seemed to offer a key to the strange postwar world with its threat of nuclear war. The dislocations and ambiguities, in cubism and abstract art as well as the surrealists, reminded me of my childhood in Shanghai.

– J. G. Ballard