Julie Burchill Quotes

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About Julie Burchill

Julie Burchill (born 3 July 1959) is an English writer, who started as writer for the New Musical Express at the age of 17. She has written for newspapers such as The Sunday Times and The Guardian, and has declared herself "militant feminist"

Born: July 3rd, 1959

Categories: Living people, English people, Journalists

Quotes: 10 sourced quotes total

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Tears are sometimes an inappropriate response to death. When a life has been lived completely honestly, completely successfully, or just completely, the correct response to death's perfect punctuation mark is a smile.
Julie Burchill
• Attributed to Burchill in: Mark Water (2000) The New Encyclopedia of Christian Quotations. p. 111
• Source: Wikiquote: "Julie Burchill" (Quotes)
The freedom that women were supposed to have found in the Sixties largely boiled down to easy contraception and abortion; things to make life easier for men, in fact.
The only kind of socialist to be is a Stalinist, and the only kind of woman to be is a Bitch.
Whenever I am sent a new book on the lively arts, the first thing I do is look for myself in the index.
Julie Burchill
• Burchill (1992) in The Spectator. 16 January 1992; cited in: Ned Sherrin (2008) Oxford Dictionary of Humorous Quotations. p. 170
• Source: Wikiquote: "Julie Burchill" (Quotes)
It has been said (by Shelley Winters) that a pretty face is a passport. But it's not - it's a visa, and it runs out fast.
A woman who looks like a girl and thinks like a man is the best sort, the most enjoyable to be with and the most pleasurable to have and to hold.
Writing is more than anything a compulsion, like some people wash their hands thirty times a day for fear of awful consequences if they do not. It pays a whole lot better than this type of compulsion, but it is no more heroic.
We may be saddled with Bush and Blair, but you've got Prince Charles (a big friend of the Islamic world, probably because of its large number of feudal kingdoms and hardline attitude to uppity women), the Catholic church (taking a brief break from buggering babies to condemn any western attack as "morally unacceptable") and posturing pansies such as Sean Penn, Sheryl Crow and Damon Albarn.
Julie Burchill
• Julie Burchill (2003) "[http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2003/feb/01/iraq.comment Why we should go to war" The Guardian, 1 February 2003
• Source: Wikiquote: "Julie Burchill" (Quotes)
Cherie Blair can call herself a feminist all she likes, but any feminist worth her salt would have made a point of having a termination - on the NHS, naturally - when she got knocked up the last time. . . Famous women would rather admit to having been sexually abused as children than to having had a termination. . . Myself, I'd as soon weep over my taken tonsils or my absent appendix as snivel over those [five] abortions. I had a choice, and I chose life - mine.
A good part — and definitely the most fun part — of being a feminist is about frightening men. American and Australian feminists have always known this, and absorbed it cheerfully into their act; one thinks of Shere Hite julienning men on phone- in shows, or Dale Spender telling us that a good feminist is rude to a man at least three times a day on principle. Of course, there's a lot more to feminism... but scaring the shit out of scumbags is an amusing and necessary part because, sadly, a good many men still respect nothing but strength,
Julie Burchill
• Burchill (1990) The Sunday Times; as cited in: Christopher W. Tindale (1999) Acts of arguing: a rhetorical model of argument. p. 58
• Source: Wikiquote: "Julie Burchill" (Quotes)

End Julie Burchill Quotes