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The ultimate meaning to which all stories refer has two faces: the continuity of life, the inevitability of death.
Italo Calvino
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Interpretation

What this quote means

Life is a continuous journey that inevitably leads to death, which is a central theme in all stories.

This quote by Italo Calvino encapsulates the dual nature of storytelling and existence: on one hand, it emphasizes the ongoing experiences and developments of life, while on the other, it acknowledges the definitive endpoint that is death. It suggests that every narrative we engage with ultimately deals with these two fundamental aspects of the human condition, framing our understanding of stories and their significance in relation to our lives.

Themes

LifeDeathStoriesContinuityInevitabilityPhilosophyExistence

In practice

Example use cases

In a speech about the importance of storytelling in understanding our lives.

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The novels that attract me most are those that create an illusion of transparency around a knot of human relationships as obscure, cruel, and perverse as possible.
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Your first book is the only one that matters. Perhaps a writer should write only that one. That is the one moment when you make the big leap; the opportunity to express yourself is offered that once, and you untie the knot within you then or never again.
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...and every Wednesday the perfumed young lady slips me a hundred-crown note to leave her alone with the convict. And by Thursday the hundred crowns are already gone in so much beer. And when the visiting hour is over, the young lady comes out with the stink of jail in her elegant clothes; and the prisoner goes back to his cell with the lady's perfume in his jailbird's suit. And I'm left with the smell of beer. Life is nothing but trading smells.
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Nobody these days holds the written word in such high esteem as police states do.
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The struggle of literature is in fact a struggle to escape from the confines of language; it stretches out from the utmost limits of what can be said; what stirs literature is the call and attraction of what is not in the dictionary.
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Fantasy is like jam. . . . You have to spread it on a solid piece of bread. If not, it remains a shapeless thing . . . out of which you can’t make anything.
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