By subscribing to Inspiring Quotes you are agreeing to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
James Baldwin’s landmark essay “Letter From a Region in My Mind” was published half a century ago, two years before the 1964 Civil Rights Act was signed into law, but the great writer’s formidable insights are as relevant today as they were then. A solution to racial inequality in the United States, Baldwin suggested, lay not just in ending segregation, but in “releasing” white Americans from their “unadmitted — and apparently… unspeakable — private fears and longings.” Love, for Baldwin, depends on letting go of fear: “I use the word ‘love’ here not merely in the personal sense," he wrote, "but as a state of being, or a state of grace… in the tough and universal sense of quest and daring and growth.”
Timeless Wisdom From Winnie the Pooh
Quotes on Aristotle’s 11 Virtues, From Courage to Wit
15 Quotes About Losing From Famous Athletes
Hang in There, Baby: A History of Cheesy Motivational Posters
12 David Attenborough Quotes to Leave You in Awe of the Earth
Quotes That Epitomize Every Myers-Briggs Type
8 Quotes From the Creative Minds of the Harlem Renaissance
16 Nuggets of Financial Advice From Warren Buffet
The State Mottos of All 50 U.S. States
10 Quotes That Reveal the Wisdom of Confucius
12 Quotes From Athletes That Transcend Sports