"I never cared what kind of grade I got"
About this Quote
Foote’s authority never came from academic gatekeeping. He wasn’t a tenured historian polishing footnotes for peer review; he was a writer building narrative gravity, betting that if you could make the past feel alive, readers would follow you into it. That helps explain the subtext: grades measure compliance and performance under someone else’s rubric, while Foote’s artistic identity is built around an internal standard - taste, voice, stamina, the long solitude of reading. The remark implies a hierarchy of values where curiosity outranks evaluation, and where learning is private, almost stubbornly self-directed.
There’s also a faint Southern aristocratic shrug in it: the confidence (or posture) that one’s worth isn’t up for institutional adjudication. In a culture increasingly addicted to metrics, Foote’s sentence still lands because it exposes how easily assessment becomes identity. He’s not offering a study tip; he’s rejecting a whole moral economy in which grades stand in for character. The irony is that the stance sounds cavalier, yet it takes discipline to live by it: if you don’t care about grades, you’d better care about the work.
Quote Details
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Foote, Shelby. (2026, January 16). I never cared what kind of grade I got. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-never-cared-what-kind-of-grade-i-got-98954/
Chicago Style
Foote, Shelby. "I never cared what kind of grade I got." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-never-cared-what-kind-of-grade-i-got-98954/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I never cared what kind of grade I got." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-never-cared-what-kind-of-grade-i-got-98954/. Accessed 22 Feb. 2026.


