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The World in a Phrase : A Brief History of the Aphorism (2005)

by James Geary

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2348114,644 (4.06)2
"Though it's an ancient art form, the aphorism is as spritely and as apposite as ever. Challenging and subversive, aphorisms deliver the short, sharp shocks of old forgotten truths. They are literature's hand luggage; They're light and compact, you can take them anywhere, and they contain everything you need to get through a tough day at the office or a dark night of the soul.". "Starting with the ancient Chinese and ending with contemporary Europeans and Americans, The World in a Phrase tells the story of the aphorism - the shortest and oldest written are form - through brief biographies of some of its greatest practitioners, Americans like Ambrose Bierre, Emily Dickinson, Mark Twain, and Dorothy Parker, great French aphorists like Montaigne, La Rochefisucauld, and Charnfort; philosophers like Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, and Wittgenstein; and prophets and sages like the Buddhist, Lao-tzu, and Jesus."--BOOK JACKET.… (more)
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Showing 1-5 of 7 (next | show all)
collection and examinations of aphorisms through the ages
  ritaer | Jul 17, 2021 |
This book interested me because I too am a collector of aphorisms. This entertaining little book offers lots of good sayings and interesting anecdotes. ( )
  Sullywriter | Apr 3, 2013 |
I've said it before: I'm a big ol' word nerd. So of course this book on the history of the aphorism appealed to me. It turned out to be even better than I expected. In addition to defining and giving wonderful examples of aphorisms, this little volume provides a brief history of philosophy as well. Beginning with Lao-Tzu and Confucius, and progressing to modern poets and activists, Geary leads us through a history of thinkers and provides us with some of their most powerful words. I'm going to hold on to this book because I believe I'll want to refer to it again. For such a small book, it holds a great deal of fascinating information! ( )
1 vote glade1 | Mar 26, 2011 |
Although I didn’t know the name at the time, about thirty years ago, I began keeping what’s sometimes referred to as a commonplace book, in my case a large spiral notebook in which I recorded bits of writing by a favorite author or Scotch-taped clippings before they disintegrated in my wallet. Now I’ve come across a kindred spirit in James Geary, whose dazzling brief history of the aphorism is guaranteed to do for your brain what a brisk walk will do for your body.

Confessing that his love of aphorisms blossomed from a fairly pedestrian source --- the “Quotable Quotes” section in Reader’s Digest --- Geary (who shares bits of his own biography, including the charming story of how he met his wife through an aphorism and worked for a time writing fortunes in a Chinese fortune cookie factory) has strong views about what aphorisms are not. “Aphorisms aren’t meant to make you feel good about yourself, either,” he writes. “More often than not, they are cynical and acerbic, an antidote to the bland, relentlessly upbeat nostrums in self-help guides and inspirational literature.” There is ample proof of that observation in these pages, from the caustic wit of Mark Twain (“Few things are harder to put up with than the annoyance of a good example.”) to the world-weary writings of the Roman Stoics Seneca (“Do not regard as valuable anything that can be taken away.”) or Marcus Aurelius (“Every man is worth just so much as the worth of what he has set his heart upon.”).

Not content with the aphorism’s conventional definition as a “terse formulation of a truth or statement” or “concise statement of principle,” Geary, who calls himself an “aphorism addict,” lays down his own five laws of aphorisms: They must be brief, definitive, personal, have a twist and be philosophical. And although he tends to stretch his own definition a bit when it suits his purposes, it’s only in the service of covering some 2,500 years of the form in fewer than 200 pages.

Geary offers a rich sampling of almost forty masters of the aphorism; well-known (Confucius, Montaigne, Nietzsche, Benjamin Franklin and yes, even Dr. Seuss) and obscure, if no less deserving of recognition (Sébastien-Roch Nicolas Chamfort and Joseph Joubert). But The World in a Phrase contains much more than a Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations-like catalog of their pithiest observations. Geary also offers mini-biographies of his subjects, explaining in the case of those who wrote more widely how their aphoristic writings fit within a body of literary work and placing each in a historical context. There’s also an extensive bibliography that will allow readers who want to pursue the writings of a particular favorite in depth.

To round out this review, I’m tempted to string together a lengthy sampling of some of the most striking aphorisms of the many in this collection that will illustrate how entertaining and painlessly educational it is, but I’ll have to content myself with only a few more of my favorites: “A man is wealthy in proportion to the things he can do without.” (Epicurus). “The most entertaining surface on earth is the human face.” (Georg Christoph Lichtenberg). “‘Tis with our judgements as our watches, none/Go just alike, yet each believes his own.” (Alexander Pope). And this one, from Montaigne, perfect for deflating the self-important people in our lives: “Upon the highest throne in the world, we are seated, still, upon our arses.”

Geary concludes his delightful work with an exhortation to follow the example of the well-known aphorist Ralph Waldo Emerson to “make your own Bible. Select and collect all the words and sentences that in all your reading have been to you like the blast of triumph out of Shakespeare, Seneca, Moses, John and Paul.” Even if you don’t decide to follow that sage advice, you can content yourself with sampling the rich lode of wisdom awaiting you in this sparkling book.

Copyright 2009 Harrisburg Magazine ( )
2 vote HarvReviewer | Sep 6, 2009 |
ne sto traducendo la prima metà. Simpatico, ma a tratti didascalico e ripetitivo.
  ilariak | Jan 22, 2009 |
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Life consists of what a man is thinking of all day.

- Ralph Waldo Emerson
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If not for an aphorism by W. H. Auden, I might not have met my wife.
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"Though it's an ancient art form, the aphorism is as spritely and as apposite as ever. Challenging and subversive, aphorisms deliver the short, sharp shocks of old forgotten truths. They are literature's hand luggage; They're light and compact, you can take them anywhere, and they contain everything you need to get through a tough day at the office or a dark night of the soul.". "Starting with the ancient Chinese and ending with contemporary Europeans and Americans, The World in a Phrase tells the story of the aphorism - the shortest and oldest written are form - through brief biographies of some of its greatest practitioners, Americans like Ambrose Bierre, Emily Dickinson, Mark Twain, and Dorothy Parker, great French aphorists like Montaigne, La Rochefisucauld, and Charnfort; philosophers like Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, and Wittgenstein; and prophets and sages like the Buddhist, Lao-tzu, and Jesus."--BOOK JACKET.

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