Savannah Marshall Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Savannah Marshall. Here they are! All 6 of them:

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Those who mismanage our affairs would silence our criticism by pretending they have facts not avaliable to the rest of us. Our best weapon against them is not to marshal facts, of which they are truly managers, but passion. Passion is our hope and strenght."
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Chinua Achebe (Anthills of the Savannah)
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We had lived in savannah for a million years. During that time the world got warm again and wetter, and some of the rain forest returned. But for us it was too late. By then we knew how to live only on the savannah. We could still climb trees, but we did not go back.
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Elizabeth Marshall Thomas (The Old Way: A Story of the First People)
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Like John Brenda's Gothic evocation of Savannah in his book, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, the city of Adelaide, with its dramatic backdrop of verdant hills against the flat city landscape, its iconic festival scene and reputation as a food and wine paradise, hid an uglier face. Beneath the veneer of genteel respectability, parts of its society crawled with human vermin.
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Debi Marshall (Banquet: The Untold Story of Adelaide's Family Murders)
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Much of his material appeared in an article in Psychiatry magazine, November, 1959: β€œThe Culture, Psychiatry, and the Written Word.” Again, it is electric speed that has revealed the lines of force operating from Western technology in the remotest areas of bush, savannah, and desert. One example is the Bedouin with his battery radio on board the camel. Submerging natives with floods of concepts for which nothing has prepared them is the normal action of all our technology. But with electric media Western man himself experiences exactly the same inundation as the remote native. We are no more prepared to encounter radio and TV in our literate milieu than the native of Ghana is able to cope with the literacy that takes him out of his collective tribal world and beaches him in individual isolation. We are as numb in our new electric world as the native involved in our literate and mechanical culture.
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Marshall McLuhan (Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man)
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Much of his material appeared in an article in Psychiatry magazine, November, 1959: β€œThe Culture, Psychiatry, and the Written Word.” Again, it is electric speed that has revealed the lines of force operating from Western technology in the remotest areas of bush, savannah, and desert. One example is the Bedouin with his battery radio on board the camel. Submerging natives with floods of concepts for which nothing has prepared them is the normal action of all our technology. But with electric media Western man himself experiences exactly the same inundation as the remote native.
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Marshall McLuhan (Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man)
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savannahs.
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Stone Marshall (Diary of a Minecraft Blacksmith - The Blacksmith and The Apprentice: Legends & Heroes Issue 1 (Stone Marshall's Legends & Heroes))