David Lodge may refer to:
Paraphrase, in the sense of summary, is as indispensable to the novel-critic as close analysis is to the critic of lyric poetry. The natural deduction is that novels are paraphrasable whereas poems are not. But this is a false deduction because close analysis is itself a disguised form of paraphrase.
Universities are the cathedrals of the modern age. They shouldn't have to justify their existence by utilitarian criteria.
Information is the religion of the modern world.
I'm a bit of a deconstructionist myself. It's kind of exciting - the last intellectual thrill left. Like sawing through the branch you're sitting on.
Jogging, I believe they call it. It seems to be an epidemic psychological illness afflicting Americans these days. A form of masochism, like the flagellantes in the Middle Ages.
I respect a man who can recognize a quotation. It's a dying art.
Walt Whitman, he who laid end to end words never seen in each other's company before outside of a dictionary.
It's the only thing that keeps me going these days, travelling. Changes of scene, changes of faces
Any language is necessarily a finite system applied with different degrees of creativity to an infinite variety of situations, and most of the words and phrases we use are "prefabricated" in the sense that we don't coin new ones every time we speak.
Every decoding is another encoding.
Morris read through the letter. Was it a shade too fulsome? No, that was another law of academic life: it is impossible to be excessive in flattery of one's peers.
Life, after all, should go forwards, not backwards.
It was Adam Appleby's misfortune that at the moment of awakening from sleep his consciousness was immediately flooded with everything he least wanted to think about