Top 24 Quotes & Sayings by John Zerzan

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American philosopher John Zerzan.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
John Zerzan

John Zerzan is an American anarchist and primitivist ecophilosopher and author. His works criticize agricultural civilization as inherently oppressive, and advocates drawing upon the ways of life of hunter-gatherers as an inspiration for what a free society should look like. Subjects of his criticism include domestication, language, symbolic thought and the concept of time.

If we once and for so long lived in balance with nature and each other, we should be able to do so again. The catastrophe that's overtaking us has deep roots, but our previous state of natural anarchy reaches much further into our shared history .
Everyone can feel the nothingness, the void, just beneath the surface of everyday routines and securities.
The more the society becomes a technological society, the less it has to hold itself together. — © John Zerzan
The more the society becomes a technological society, the less it has to hold itself together.
Mass society has displaced real community, where people function together and account for their own lives.
I don't think it could be a coincidence that the more technological a society is, the less it connects people.
I do what I do and hope that it might connect with people who are thinking along the same lines.
There's a hollowness to civilized life. It doesn't appeal to people, and some people react with extreme violence.
If we once, and for so long, lived in balance with nature and each other, we should be able to do so again.
I think pushing the ideas is important. I wouldn't say it's more important than action. You can't really separate the two.
We have the freedom to choose between brand A, brand B, and brand C. That´s about it for freedom.
The largely hidden key to the symbolic world is time; indeed it is at the origin of human symbolic activity. Time thus occasions the first alienation, the route away from aboriginal richness and wholeness.
We live in an era with no real sense of community or connection to nature.
We don't need more stupid ideas.
The pleasure of authenticity exists only against the grain of society.
"The people" aren't running anything. That's why technology has replaced politics as the source of ideology. The ideological claims are hollow and absurd, and nobody believes them anymore.
If you have a problem in mass society, you call the cops. The experts. You no longer have any operative connection with yourself or others, or with a functioning community.
Republicans don't want to shrink government. They want more and more military, more and more surveillance. They'd like to have the government banning gay marriage and so forth.
We are lost, but other animals point to the right road. They are the right road.
It is our fall from a simplicity and fullness of life directly experienced, from the sensuous moment of knowing, which leaves a gap that the symbolic can never bridge.
Never before have people been so infantalized, made so dependant on the machine for everything; as the earth rapidly approaches its extinction due to technology, our souls are shrunk and flattened by its pervasive rule. Any sense of wholeness and freedom can only return by the undoing of the massive division of labour at the heart of technological progress. This is the liberatory project in all its depth.
A great deal of anthropological/ethnological literature describes indigenous peoples who live in oneness with the natural world and one another. Survival itself necessitates a borderlessness between inner and outer worlds. At times we still feel a return to that unified state. T.S. Eliot’s designation of our return is ‘through the unknown remembered gate.'
The liberty that remains to us is essentially the freedom to choose among brands A, B, and C. — © John Zerzan
The liberty that remains to us is essentially the freedom to choose among brands A, B, and C.
We can either passively continue on the road to utter domestication and destruction or turn in the direction of joyful upheaval, passionate and feral embrace of wildness and life that aims at dancing on the ruins of clocks, computers and that failure of imagination and will called work. Can we justify our lives by anything less than such a politics of rage and dreams?
Culture has lead us to betray our own aboriginal spirit and wholeness, into an ever-worsening realm of synthetic, isolating, impoverishing estrangement. Which is not to say that there are no more everyday pleasures, without which we would loose our humanness. But as our plight deepens, we glimpse how much must be erased for our redemption.
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