Cultural Appropriation Quotes
Collection of top 16 famous quotes about Cultural Appropriation
Cultural Appropriation Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Cultural Appropriation quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
I know that I always wanted things. I was always proud of my people, proud of my home, but I always wanted more. I think most people do.
— Dolly Parton
Some people are so fond of ill luck that they run halfway to meet it.
— Douglas William Jerrold
All of us
men and women alike
have to understand and acknowledge how stereotypes and biases cloud our beliefs and perpetuate the status quo. — Sheryl Sandberg
men and women alike
have to understand and acknowledge how stereotypes and biases cloud our beliefs and perpetuate the status quo. — Sheryl Sandberg
Always be reading something, he said. Even when we're not physically reading. How else will we read the world? Think of it as a constant.
— Ali Smith
Sometimes you just gotta wear the tinfoil hat.
— Gary Hopkins
The personal appropriation of cliches is a condition for the spread of cultural tourism.
— Serge Daney
No, no, my friend. You are kind, and you mean well, but you can never understand these things as I do. You've never been oppressed.
— S. Alice Callahan
You know what I love... everything.
— John Irving
I've always been a big fan of time travel, and I'm very into the notion that some day we'll be able to do it. Beam me up!
— Scott Bakula
The lawyer's pouch is a mouth of hell.
— Henry George Bohn
You're cooking", said Elizabeth, and each word came out of her mouth as if it was ashamed of being in the room with the others, "bunny soup.
— Liam Perrin
Please God ... lead me to that kind of love. Until then, help me to know that You are enough.
— Karen Kingsbury
Creation requires sacrifice and when it is finished it is embraced by a few but misunderstood and rejected by many.
— Christ John Otto
His uniform seems threadbare and tired, and so does he, as though he's coming apart along the edges.
— Ally Condie
I have never passed a bookstore without going inside; it's sacrilegious
— Denise Hildreth Jones